The United States and several Arab and Muslim-majority nations including Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have called for the UN Security Council to quickly adopt a US resolution endorsing Donald Trump's peace plan for Gaza.
"The United States, Qatar, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Jordan, and Türkiye express our joint support for the Security Council Resolution currently under consideration," the countries said in a joint statement, adding they were seeking the measure's "swift adoption".
Last week the Americans officially launched negotiations within the 15-member Security Council on a text that would follow up on a ceasefire in the two-year war between Israel and Hamas and endorse Mr Trump's plan.
"We emphasise that this is a sincere effort, and the plan provides viable path towards peace and stability, not only between the Israelis and the Palestinians, but for the entire region."
A draft of the resolution seen "welcomes the establishment of the Board of Peace," a transitional governing body for Gaza - that Mr Trump would theoretically chair - with a mandate running until the end of 2027.
It would authorise member states to form a "temporary International Stabilisation Force (ISF)" that would work with Israel and Egypt and newly trained Palestinian police to help secure border areas and demilitarise Gaza.
Unlike previous drafts, the latest mentions a possible future Palestinian state.
The joint statement comes as Russia circulated a competing draft resolution to Council members that does not authorise the creation of a board of peace or the immediate deployment of an international force in Gaza, according to the text seen by AFP.
The Russian version welcomes "the initiative that led to the ceasefire" but does not name Mr Trump.
It calls on the UN secretary general to "identify options for implementing the provisions" of the peace plan and to promptly submit a report that also addresses the possibilities of deploying an international stabilisation force in war-ravaged Gaza.
The United States has called the ceasefire "fragile," and warned yesterday of the risks of not adopting its draft.
"Attempts to sow discord now - when agreement on this resolution is under active negotiation - has grave, tangible, and entirely avoidable consequences for Palestinians in Gaza," a spokesperson for the US mission at the United Nations said in a statement.
While it seemed until now that Council members supported principles of the peace plan, diplomatic sources noted there were multiple questions about the US text, particularly regarding the absence of a monitoring mechanism by the Council, the role of the Palestinian Authority, and details of the ISF's mandate.