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Despite US/Israel Objections, Palestinians 'Moving Ahead' with UN Bid: Erakat
Palestinians are determined to go ahead with their UN membership bid as an Arab League follow-up committee endorsed a final draft of the request to be presented to the UN General Assembly, a top official said.
Palestinians are determined to go ahead with their UN membership bid as an Arab League follow-up committee endorsed a final draft of the request to be presented to the UN General Assembly, chief negotiator Saeb Erakat says. Saeb Erakat brushed off as a public relations stunt Israeli attempts to lure the Palestinians back into peace talks based on the 1967 borders if they abandon the UN membership campaign.
"The Palestinian train is now heading towards New York," Erakat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, told AFP during the committee's meeting in Doha, Qatar, late on Wednesday.
After the meeting, Erakat said the members of the committee "have reached a final agreement to request the full support for a Palestinians state within the 1967 borders with its capital Jerusalem."
The request "will be ready to present before the next UN General Assembly session" in September, said Erakat.
The committee members had also agreed to "double their efforts to garner support from members of the UN Security Council," he added.
Erakat played down statements by an Israeli government official who said Tuesday his country was willing to begin new peace talks based on the 1967 lines if the Palestinians drop their UN membership bid.
He said the statements were "leaked" from the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin, dismissing them as a PR exercise.
Talks between Israel and the Palestinians have been on hold since last September, grinding to a halt shortly after their relaunch earlier the same month over the issue of settlement construction.
Israel has declined to renew a partial settlement freeze that expired shortly after the direct talks began, and the Palestinians have said they will not negotiate while Israel builds on occupied land they want for a future state.
With the talks on ice, they have instead pushed forward with the plan to seek UN membership for a Palestinian state.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has insisted the plan does not rule out the possibility of new peace talks, but said he will not negotiate without a settlement freeze and a clear set of parameters for any new talks.
Faced with the promise of a Security Council veto by the United States, which is pressing the Palestinians to resume stalled negotiations with Israel instead, Erakat urged the US government to "reconsider its position."
The Arab League follow-up committee, which groups the Palestinian Authority, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Lebanon, is chaired by Qatar.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllGood.
Oh, noes! They're not buying what Israel is selling anymore... I wonder why?
The Palistinians may be tilting at windmills, given an almost certain US Security Council veto, but with their quixotesque act they will at least retain their dignity. It remains to be seen as to how many other members of the UN can be bribed, badgered, or bullied into voting against the request for entry if it comes up before the General Assembly at all.
What have they to lose? Without independent nation status they are nothing. One can only wonder what Israel fears from their recognition. For years Israel has thrown up the fact that they are not a recognized nation, now that they seek that recognition Israel and the west threaten them. How long can Israel wall them and off and bomb them, and refuse to include these people, yet deny them the right to govern themselves?
What do they have to lose indeed! As I posted elsewhere:
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Meanwhile, in "the Middle East's Only Democracy" (TM), a bill has just been introduced in the Knesset, with support from not only the coalition parties but Kadima as well, that defines the state as Jewish (and not democratic) whenever those two principles conflict; that mandates Jewish law as the basis for court rulings; and eliminates Arabic as an official state language. (If you don't believe me, just go to http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/lawmakers-seek-to-drop-arabic-as-one-of-israel-s-official-languages-1.376829.)
Israel is rocketing toward its own version of Sharia law, and embracing racism as never before.
It is not quite like Quixote.
It is more like when the Palestinians hit the "windmill" with their lance, for just one moment it will be revealed to the world as the giant it truly is.
Times are changing. Israel offered to take in Mubarak, obviously in recognition of what he had done for them over the years. The Arab Spring has given spine to the Arab League.
I say good for the Palestinians weather it passes or not.
Another moral victory for the Palestians, regardless of the outcome.
Are the Norwegians still strong supporters? Hope so.
It will be interesting to see how many Western European states decide that Palestinian statehood is a bridge too far. Probably most of them; in the end, they're cowards that do America's bidding.
Norway has been a big supporter on this.
Many speculated that that crazy mucker's rampage in Norway was truly an Israeli operation. I pointed out that a good test would be Norway's support of the Palestinian's UN strategy -does it stay or go?
Well, that's the question, isn't it? But Norway is obediently participating in our Afghan and Libyan turkey shoots, so don't get your hopes up just yet.
a writer recently published an article on the US policies in the middle east, suggesting that the US needs a second independentce, this time from israel.
The Palestinians will have to take matters into their own hands and move ahead, despite US/Israeli objections. That's the only way that the Palestinians will have even a ghost of a chance at getting what they need and want; An independent, sovereign nation-state alongside Israel, with East Jerusalem as its Capitol. Let's hope they move ahead..now, with all deliberate speed.
Is this the shills day off?