Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority, shows a copy of the letter requesting Palestine’s full admission to the UN as a sovereign state during the United Nations General Assembly on Sept 23, at UN headquarters in New York.
Bid not a bullet … Give us our sky PALESTINE ASKS UN FOR RECOGNITION AS FULL MEMBER STATE UNITED NATIONS, Sept 23, (AFP): Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas made history in his people’s long quest for statehood Friday as he formally asked the United Nations to admit Palestine as a member state.
Prompting an angry response from Israel and dismissal by the United States, Abbas handed over the request in a white folder emblazoned with the Palestinian crest to UN chief Ban Ki-moon. More than 120 nations have already recognized a Palestinian state and Abbas triggered wild applause and a standing ovation from some delegates when he later stepped up to address the UN General Assembly, vowing the Palestinians were ready to return to peace talks if Israeli settlement activities cease.
Waving a copy of the request over the UN podium, Abbas said he had submitted an “application for the admission of Palestine on the basis of the June 4, 1967 borders” with Jerusalem as its capital.
Explaining why he had pressed the Palestinian bid despite the opposition, Abbas said all previous peace efforts “were repeatedly smashed against the rocks of the positions of the Israeli government.”
But the Palestinian leader stressed the Palestinians did not want to “isolate or de-legitimize” Israel.
The Palestinians only wanted to end Israel’s settlement policy which he said will “destroy chances” of a two-state solution to the decades-only conflict.
“This settlement policy threatens to also undermine the structure of the Palestinian National Authority and even end its existence,” he said.
Crowds of tens of thousands of Palestinians cheered across the West Bank where they watched the speech on giant TV screens.
But Israel was scathing.
In his own address to the UN, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: “The truth is that we cannot reach peace through UN resolutions but through negotiations. The truth is that so far the Palestinians have refused to negotiate.”
Ultra-nationalist Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said in a television interview that Abbas’s move “proves that the Palestinians have no intention of negotiating with Israel,” while Netanyahu ally Gideon Saar, the education minister, called the Palestinian’s speech “venomous.”
The United States, which is Israel’s main backer, also cold-shouldered Abbas. The US ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, sat stony-faced during Abbas’s speech and wrote in a Twitter message that “shortcuts” were no way to achieve Israeli-Palestinian peace.
Amid a new bout of intense diplomatic maneuvering, the Mideast Quartet — the United States, Russia, European Union and United Nations — met after Abbas’ speech and issued a statement calling for a peace deal by the end of 2012.
Palestinians were seized by the historic moment, which comes more than six decades after the creation of Israel in 1948.
Crowds in Ramallah and across the West Bank roared their approval, AFP reporters said.
“With our souls, with our blood, we will defend Palestine!” they roared as widescreen televisions relayed live footage of Abbas holding up a copy of the membership demand he had personally handed to UN chief Ban Ki-moon.
But fearing violence, some 22,000 Israeli police and border police were on high alert with forces deployed along the Green Line between Israel and the West Bank, in annexed east Jerusalem, and around Arab Israeli towns.
A Palestinian was shot dead in clashes with Israeli troops that erupted after settlers attacked a village near Nablus on the West Bank.
Israeli officials have warned of harsh retaliatory measures if the Palestinians succeed in their bid, including a halt to funding for the Palestinian Authority. Right-wing members of the government have gone so far as to call for annexation of the West Bank.
Besides dealing a blow to Israel’s position in future peace negotiations, some believe UN recognition of a Palestinian state could allow Palestinians to sue Israel over alleged human rights abuses.
Frantic attempts led by the United States to persuade the Palestinians to renounce their membership bid went on until the last moment.
The United States has vowed to veto the bid at the UN Security Council, where the Palestinians in any case need to win the backing of nine of the 15 council members.
If that bid fails, they may well seek to be admitted as a non-member observer state by the General Assembly.
A French suggestion that Palestine be given an intermediate status as a United Nations observer nation remained on the table, Foreign Minister Alain Juppe’s spokesman said Friday despite what he said were “Israeli reservations”.
Abbas was to leave New York after giving his UN speech to return to the Palestinian territories for consultations on the next step forward.
Cheers
Tens of thousands of Palestinians erupted into cheers of victory across the West Bank on Friday, hailing their president’s historic bid for Palestinian UN membership.
In central Ramallah’s Arafat Square, the crowd roared its approval at the news that President Mahmud Abbas had handed over a formal request asking the United Nations to admit Palestine as a member state.
“Abbas we are your people and you truly make us raise our heads high,” they shouted. “With our souls and our blood, we will defend Palestine!”
The scene was similar in city centres across the West Bank, where massive crowds gathered in front of giant television screens to listen to Abbas urge the international community to approve the membership bid.
Security services spokesman Adnan Damiri told AFP “tens of thousands” had turned out to hear the address.
In the northern city of Nablus, the Al-Ashaqeen folk band entertained huge crowds in the run-up to the speech, while those gathered in Hebron cheered as a huge balloon decorated with a picture of Abbas was released into the night.
In Ramallah, Abbas’s West Bank headquarters, the mood was festive, with the crowd singing and dancing, including those on rooftops around Arafat Square.
“I can’t believe myself, I’m so happy. I’ve been here since yesterday,” said Bassima Mahmud, a government employee who sported a keffiyeh scarf.
“It’s like a Palestinian wedding,” added Omayma Abdel Halim, who had brought her three-year-old son along to watch the speech.
But as Abbas approached the UN podium to address the General Assembly, the jubilant crowds fell silent.
They listened, waiting for the moment he would officially announce he had handed over the request for the UN to accept Palestine as a full member state — and then they went wild.
Men and women jumped up and down, arm-in-arm, waving flags and chanting “God is great, God is great.”
“It’s just wonderful, it’s very emotional,” said Mona Matar, a professor of computer science at Bethlehem University.
“I’m so lucky to live to see this day, us having the courage to say no to everybody. To see that Abbas does not care what Obama wants, but what his people want.”
At the end of the speech, the crowd again began to cheer, parents boosting their children onto their shoulders, and posing for pictures by giant posters featuring Abbas and his predecessor Yasser Arafat.
The ghost of Arafat, the iconic Palestinian leader, loomed large over the proceedings, with the crowd frequently chanting his name and cheering at Abbas’s mention of the former president.
“We really miss Arafat at this historical moment,” Matar said. “He was something special.”
In Ramallah, reaction was also warm.
“I give it 100 out of 100,” said an enthusiastic Yasser al-Shaer, whose four-year-old son was wriggling on his shoulders, glancing at the sea of flags around him.
“I’m 100 percent with Abu Mazen. I’m so optimistic and I hope all the countries of the world will recognise us.”
The uplifting mood was in sharp contrast to that in Gaza, where the Hamas rulers and Abbas’s Fatah party had agreed that no rallies would take place.
And it came after a day of clashes at flashpoints across the West Bank, including in the village of Qusra, south of Nablus, where a Palestinian man was shot dead by Israeli troops in clashes that erupted after an attack by settlers.
Hospital sources named the man as 37-year-old Issam Badran, and said he died after being hit in the neck by a live bullet.
Another three Palestinians were lightly wounded by rubber bullets in the same incident.
Injuries were also reported from clashes between Palestinians and Israeli soldiers at the Qalandia checkpoint between Ramallah and Jerusalem and in Nabi Saleh, some 15 kms (9 miles) further north.