Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Tunisia dismisses UN ambassador for purportedly being too critical Trump Mideast plan

“Tunisia’s ambassador to the United Nations has been dismissed for purely professional reasons concerning his weak performance and lack of coordination with the ministry on important matters under discussion at the U.N.,” said the foreign ministry in a statement.

Former Tunisian Ambassador to the U.N. Moncef Baati. Credit: Flickr.
Former Tunisian Ambassador to the U.N. Moncef Baati. Credit: Flickr.

Tunisia sacked its ambassador to the United Nations, Moncef Baati, on Friday for allegedly not consulting with the country’s foreign ministry on issues, including the Trump administration’s Israeli-Palestinian peace plan.

“Tunisia’s ambassador to the United Nations has been dismissed for purely professional reasons concerning his weak performance and lack of coordination with the ministry on important matters under discussion at the UN,” said the foreign ministry in a statement.

Baati has been on the U.N. Security Council since the beginning of the year. Diplomatic sources told AFP that the ambassador went beyond what Tunisian President Kais Saied wanted in his criticism of the peace proposal.

Baati reportedly has been leading “diplomatic negotiations on a Palestinian draft Security Resolution declaring U.S. President Donald Trump’s Middle East peace plan in breach of international law,” reported Foreign Policy, citing three diplomats.

Members of the Security Council lamented Baati’s dismissal, according to AFP and Foreign Policy.

The latest draft of the resolution is much less aggressive in tone than the initial version, according to AFP, which recently obtained a copy.

The new draft, which was acquired ahead of a U.N. Security Council vote on Tuesday, no longer mentions the United States by name and uses less confrontational language than the original, according to the report.

Body cam and drone footage show the first moments the IDF arrived at the strategic mountain ridge in southeastern Lebanon.
“These vile attempts to harm us will only strengthen our hold on the land,” said Yesha Council head Yisrael Ganz.
“If I didn’t tell their stories, they’d be lost,” says M.R. Manheim, whose debut book chronicles the lives of his father and two uncles—three Jewish brothers from Philadelphia who served in active combat.
“Enough is enough,” the New York governor said ahead of the Israel Day on Fifth parade. “The march today is an act of defiance.”
“Israel’s under a lot of fire, and it’s important to celebrate,” Emma Gurvichkin, of Queens, told JNS.
“I like to think of myself as a Bill Clinton Democrat,” Ethan Agarwal told JNS. “Can we restore that?”