At the summit, Zhai urged the United Nations to hold a larger, more authoritative and more influential international conference for peace as soon as possible.
The Chinese envoy last week kicked off a Middle Eastern swing as part of diplomatic efforts aimed at cooling tensions in the region. Chinese leaders, including President Xi Jinping, had earlier called for a ceasefire and urged restraint.
Zhai told Qatar’s state minister, Mohammed Abdulaziz al-Khulaifi, last week that China condemned acts that harmed civilians, opposed moves that violated international law, and called on “all relevant parties to keep calm and exercise restraint”.
On Sunday, Zhai told Chinese media that he spoke with his counterparts in Palestine, Israel and Egypt, among others. He said his visits with other regional leaders would improve coordination to help ease the situation.
Zhai said China was “deeply concerned” about the conflict spiralling, and described a “very serious” situation at risk of “increasing unprecedentedly” with a large-scale ground conflict.
“The spillover effects on the region and the international community are spreading and the prospects are worrying,” he said.
“Relevant parties in the international community should remain calm and restrained, uphold objectivity and impartiality, promote conflict de-escalation, open humanitarian relief channels as soon as possible, and avoid greater impact on regional and international security.”
Zhai reiterated calls for a “two-state solution”, saying it was the “only realistic way to break the vicious cycle of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict”.
When Zhai met his Russian counterpart Mikhail Bogdanov in Qatar last week, he said the “fundamental reason for the current situation in the conflict is that the legitimate rights of the Palestinian nation have not been guaranteed”.
“The fundamental reason why the Palestinian-Israeli situation has developed to this point is that the Palestinian people’s right to statehood has been shelved for a long time, their right to survival has been trampled on, and their right of return has been ignored for a long time,” he told Chinese state broadcaster CCTV.
Malaysia expects West backlash for backing Palestinian cause in Israel-Gaza war
Malaysia expects West backlash for backing Palestinian cause in Israel-Gaza war
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had earlier this month called for an international peace conference to “reach consensus” on the conflict, during a call with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
“China believes that force has never been the solution to problems, and using violence for violence will only lead to a vicious cycle of retaliation and create more obstacles to political settlement,” Zhai said.