Erakat: Palestinians to Push U.N. Bid despite Pressure

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Palestinians will push on with a bid to achieve non-member status at the United Nations despite pressure for them to back down, top negotiator Saeb Erakat said on Monday.

"No matter what pressure we are facing... we will not go back on our decision," Erakat said in Amman after talks in the Jordanian capital between Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi.

"We tell the countries that are trying to undermine our action that we are not seeking a confrontation with America or to isolate Israel, but to isolate Israeli occupation and settlements, and to affirm the principle of the two states," he told reporters.

Abbas and Arabi discussed the Palestinian U.N. bid and agreed on a number of legal and diplomatic measures related to the move, Erakat said.

Arabi, meanwhile, said Arab League ministers would meet at their Cairo headquarters on November 12 to discuss the bid and would be joined the next day by representatives of the 27-member European Union for more talks.

"It is time for Palestine to obtain such recognition at the United Nations," said Arabi.

The Palestinians have sought to upgrade their status at the U.N. from an observer entity to that of a non-member state, as they aim to push for their long-promised independent state, side by side Israel.

Abbas has said he will table the resolution later this month, on either November 15 or 29, officials say.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Sunday the Palestinian bid would not bring about peace but instability, and urged Abbas to resume direct peace talks that have been on hold for more than two years.

"I am taking this opportunity to call again on President Abbas to return immediately to negotiations without preconditions because we can only advance peace around the negotiating table and not through unilateral decisions at the United Nations which will only distance peace and bring instability," he said.

In September 2011, Abbas made a high-profile bid for for full-member status, which stalled before it was put to a vote in the U.N. Security Council where the United States had pledged to use its veto power.

Comments 1
Missing phillipo 05 November 2012, 19:12

As I have mentioned before, unless the Palestinians decide to sit down and talk to the Israelis, they will not get peace. No matter how long the talk to the UN, to the Arab League, to the EU and whoever else they want to talk to, peace will not come without talking to the Israelis.
Just as I read this Lebanese site, I also read Israeli ones, and just today I read a comment by Netanyahu that Abbas has not even bothered answering an Israeli invitation to sit down and talk.
Abbas remember - Peace will bring you a democratic, peaceful and Independent State of Palestine.
Abbas remember - Peace you achieve with your enemies, not with your friends.