MAJDI
MOHAMMED/APPalestinians hold pictures of Prime Minister Stephen Harper
superimposed with a face of a dog during a protest in Ramallah, Wednesday.
Karin Laub
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
A bid for UN
recognition of a state of Palestine is a last-ditch attempt to rescue troubled
Mideast peace efforts, a Palestinian spokeswoman said Wednesday, rejecting
Israel’s charge that it is an attempt to bypass negotiations.
Hanan Ashrawi, a
senior Palestinian official, urged the U.S. to drop its opposition to the bid,
dismissing Washington’s stance as “pathetic” and harmful to American interests
in the region. The Palestinians have come under intense pressure from the U.S.,
Britain and others to modify the bid but “have not succumbed,” she said.
On Thursday,
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas plans to ask the UN General Assembly to
recognize Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, areas Israel
captured in the 1967 Mideast war. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, but still
controls most access.
The Palestinians
expect some two-thirds of the General Assembly’s 193 members will accept
Palestine as a non-member observer state. The U.S., Israel, Canada and a few
others are opposed.
The vote will not
change the situation on the ground, yet the Palestinians still say it is
significant.
Abbas has said UN
recognition is not meant to replace negotiations with Israel, but to improve
Palestinian leverage and secure the pre-1967 war frontiers as the baseline for
future border talks — an idea Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has
rejected.
This does not mean the
UN vote will pave the way for a quick resumption of talks, which broke down
four years ago.
Abbas has said he will
not negotiate as long as Israel keeps expanding settlements on war-won land.
Half a million Israelis now live in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, blurring
the 1967 lines.
Beyond a 10-month
partial halt in 2009 that failed to restart sustained peace talks, Netanyahu
has refused to freeze construction in settlements, and UN recognition of
“Palestine” will not soften Abbas’ refusal to negotiate without a freeze, his
aides say.
Referring to Israeli
settlement building, Ashrawi said Wednesday that the UN bid “is a last-ditch
effort, because we believe the two-state solution (a Palestinian state
alongside Israel) is in jeopardy as a result of these actions.”
She said if the U.S.
“can’t vote yes, at least don’t vote no, because that would be seen as being
really pathetic by the rest of the world.”
Israeli government
spokesman Mark Regev dismissed the UN quest as futile, saying only negotiations
with Israel can bring about a Palestinian state.
“They can get pieces
of paper from the UN, but they are not going to move peace forward, they are
not going to make a Palestinian statehood more real,” he said.
“They boycott Israel.
They refuse to talk to us. Who do they plan to make peace with?” he said.
Surveys indicate most
Palestinians have become disillusioned with prospects of setting up a state
through negotiations. Two decades of talks have failed to produce results,
marred by intransigence and repeated bouts of violence.
The vote comes at an
important time domestically for Abbas, who has watched his political rival, the
Islamic militant Hamas, gain popularity, particularly after holding its own
during an Israeli offensive on Hamas-ruled Gaza earlier this month, aimed at
stopping almost daily rocket barrages from Gaza at southern Israel.
Hamas, which seized
control of Gaza from Abbas in 2007, argues that negotiations with Israel are a
waste of time, but Hamas leaders have come out in support of the UN bid in
recent days.
During Israel’s Gaza
offensive, Abbas was largely sidelined at his compound in the West Bank,
underscoring international concerns that the deadlock in peace efforts is
increasingly weakening him and other Palestinian pragmatists.
Abbas aides have said
they expect key European countries to support the UN bid at the last minute in
an attempt to strengthen Abbas.
On Tuesday, France
announced its support, followed on Wednesday by similar pledges from Spain,
Norway, Denmark and Switzerland. Germany said it would not support the
initiative.
Israel appeared to be
backing away from plans to immediately punish the Palestinians for going to the
UN. Instead, an Israeli government official said Israel would wait to see
whether the Palestinians would use the world body’s expected approval to hurt
Israel.
The Palestinians plan
to seek membership or access to a number of international and UN agencies,
including the International Criminal Court, once their statehood bid is
approved.
Israel would respond
“forcefully” if the Palestinians try to pursue war crimes charges against
Israel at the ICC, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to
discuss policy considerations. If the Palestinians use their upgraded
international status “as a tool to confront Israel in the international arena,
there will be a response.”
Until then, he said,
Israel will be bound by its obligations to the Palestinians under existing
peace agreements, but won’t necessarily go beyond them. Earlier there was talk
of Israel’s retaliating by cancelling the partial peace accords.
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