President Mahmud Abbas has promised Palestinians he will seek UN membership before the Security Council next week, amid mounting opposition from Israel and the United States. With Washington calling the move ‘counterproductive,’ Abbas told Palestinians in a televised address on Friday: ‘It is our legitimate right to demand the full membership of the state of Palestine in the UN.’
Europe on Saturday joined the diplomatic tussle, calling for a ‘constructive solution’ on Palestinian statehood and a resumption of negotiations with Israel. ‘We continue to believe that a constructive solution that can gather as much support as possible and allows for the resumption of negotiations is the best and only way to deliver the peace and two state solution the Palestinian people want,’ said Jaja Cocijanic, spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton. Yossi Peled, a Likud party minister without portfolio in the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told public radio on Saturday Israel could not prevent the Palestinian UN recourse.
‘Unfortunately, Israel does not have the means to prevent the Palestinians from demanding adhesion of their state to the UN, and it is impossible to stop them,’ he said. ‘But the initiative will no doubt not get through the Security Council, and will leave us room to negotiate,’ he said, adding that only direct talks will result in the solution of two states for two peoples. Washington has already threatened to veto the Palestinian bid in the Security Council.
Abbas made his pledge after Israel boosted its military presence in the West Bank ahead of expected Palestinian demonstrations as the UN statehood bid looms on September 23. Israel’s daily Yediot Aharonot said three battalions of reservists – some 1,500 personnel – had been mobilised and units already in the occupied territory had been reinforced. Explaining US opposition to the planned UN bid, State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said: ‘We believe that any gesture, any movement in New York to that end would be counterproductive to what the real focus should be on, which is direct negotiations between the parties.
‘And that remains our goal and our priority.’ Direct Palestinian peace talks with Israel foundered nearly a year ago over a dispute over Israel’s continued construction of Jewish settlements on occupied Palestinian land. Abbas said he would seek UN membership ‘to put an end to a historical injustice by attaining liberty and independence, like the other peoples of the earth, in a Palestinian state on the borders of June 4, 1967.’
He was referring to the lines that existed before the 1967 Six Day War, including Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem. Israel says they are indefensible and the borders of a future Palestinian state must be defined in bilateral negotiations. Washington says the basis for an agreement should be the 1967 borders but with mutually agreed amendments. Russia said this week it would support the Palestinian bid at the UN while some 127 countries have recognised Palestine as an independent state. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said two American envoys would return to the Middle East on Tuesday for talks with Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
But they do have the way and means to blow up the building for such acts will not prick
their conscience. Unfortunately their psyche lacks this little character.
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