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SC reviews Palestinian bid for full UN membership
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SC reviews Palestinian bid for full UN membership

AFP

UNITED NATIONS—The United Nations Security Council said Monday that it would decide this month on the Palestinians’ bid for full UN membership, with the longshot campaign unlikely to survive US opposition.

As the Gaza war rages on into its seventh month, the council’s move was described as “historic” by the Palestinians, but denounced by Israel.

Maltese ambassador Vanessa Frazier, who holds the rotating presidency of the council, said that “the council has decided that this deliberation has to take place during the month of April.”

Any request to become a UN member state must first pass through the Security Council—where Israel’s ally the United States wields a veto—and then be endorsed by the General Assembly.

Equal treatment

The Palestinians, who have had observer status at the world body since 2012, have lobbied for years to gain full membership, which would amount to recognition of Palestinian statehood.

“Today is a historic moment,” Palestinian UN envoy Riyad Mansour told reporters as the Security Council members, through an ad hoc committee on new membership, started the review process after the Palestinians last week relaunched their formal 2011 bid.

“All we ask for is to take our rightful place among the community of nations, to be treated as equals—equals to other nations and states, to live in freedom and dignity, in peace and security, in our ancestral land,” Mansour said in the General Assembly.

Observers though are predicting a veto from the United States, which has opposed Palestinian membership since 2011.

“Our position is a position that is known, it hasn’t changed,” Washington’s UN ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said. “But we are going to continue to find a path to bring a two-state solution.”

‘Not the right place’

Under US legislation, the United States is required to cut off funding to UN agencies that give full membership to a Palestinian state, though it has at times applied the law selectively.

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Washington maintains the United Nations is not the place for hashing out Palestinian statehood, which it stresses should be the result of an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians.

Israel’s UN ambassador Gilad Erdan launched bitter criticism from the assembly podium.

“The Security Council is busy right now discussing the recognition of a ‘PalestiNazi’ state instead of designating Hamas as a terror organization. This will be the vilest reward of the vilest crimes,” he said.

The Gaza war was sparked by the Oct. 7 attack against Israel by Hamas militants. —AFP

 


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