Posted tagged ‘Palestinian state’

Palestinians to demand UN set timeline for ‘end of occupation’

September 26, 2014

Palestinians to demand UN set timeline for ‘end of occupation’

Palestinian President Abbas to lobby UN to set a timeframe for Israel’s withdrawal from the West Bank ahead of the establishment of a Palestinian state as part of UN General Assembly.

Ynetnews Published: 09.26.14, 13:10 / Israel News

via Palestinians to demand UN set timeline for ‘end of occupation’ – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Nice now canceling the  Oslo agreements ?

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has said that he will launch a bid at the United Nations on Friday to set a timeline for the “end of the Israeli occupation,” Palestinian news agency Ma’an reported.

Abbas is set to address the UN at 7 pm (noon EST) amid growing anger within the Palestinian street that the Palestinian Authority which he leads has failed to make substantial gains regarding the Palestinian’s national ambitions; anger further exacerbated by Operation Protective Edge and ongoing security cooperation with Israel.

 

Is Abbas’s UN trip Israel’s last hope for peace? (Photo: EPA)
 

According to Ma’an, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian peace negotiator, said that Palestinian leadership have lost faith in the US-led talks, the last round of which ended uneventfully in April, and despite US Secretary of State John Kerry’s disapproval have decided to go ahead with the UN bid.

According to Israel Radio, Abbas met with Kerry last week and told him about the plan. Kerry expressed his disapproval, to which Abbas responded that if the US uses its veto power in the Security Council to shoot down the initiative, then the Palestinians would move to join over 500 international bodies, including the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

The US has urged Abbas not to turn to the Security Council, but has not offered an alternative, a Palestinian official speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to discuss internal deliberations with the media said last week.

Erekat confirmed for Ma’an that the Palestinians – whom currently enjoy the status of observer non-member state in the UN – will propose the resolution on Friday to end the occupation and implement all previous international decisions regarding Israel and Palestine.

Erekat said that Riyadh Mansour, the Palestinian envoy to the UN, expects that the application would take 2-3 weeks until it reaches the “blueprint” stage..

Abbas adviser Nabil Abu Rdeneh has said in the past that the Palestinian leader would present a new strategy in his UN speech. In recent weeks, Abbas and his aides have hinted at the content of the proposal, according to which Abbas would ask the UN Security Council to issue a binding resolution, with a three-year deadline for ending Israel’s occupation.

‘End occupation, make peace’

“Prime Minister Netanyahu: End the occupation, make peace,” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Monday ahead of the UN General Assembly, AFP reported.

Prime Minister Netanyahu is also set to travel to the UN as well, where he will deliver a speech in the general assembly, and then meet with US President Obama to discuss the Islamic State terror group. Israeli officials say the Palestinian issue will play a peripheral role in this year’s UN meet, in light of the chaos in Syria and Iraq.

Nonetheless, speaking at the Cooper Union hall, Abbas said: “The international community has the responsibility to protect our people, living under the terror of settlers, an occupying army,” AFP reported.

“We cannot understand how the Israeli government can be so misguided as to fail to understand that the indiscriminate bombing of Gaza that killed thousands of women and children only sowed more hate,” Abbas reportedly said, according to AFP.

“This week I will propose to the United Nations a new timetable for peace talks,” Abbas said, AFP reported.

In an interview with Palestinian TV last month, Abbas said it should only take “half an hour or an hour” to delineate the borders of a Palestinian state, since the United States agreed they should be based on the 1967 borders that existed before the war in which Israel captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

PA plan seeks Palestinian state, IDF pullout within 3 years

September 2, 2014

PA plan seeks Palestinian state, IDF pullout within 3 years

Present a map of future Palestine or face international condemnation and an end to West Bank security cooperation, Abbas to tell Israel

By Times of Israel staff and Avi Issacharoff

September 2, 2014, 3:12 pm

via PA plan seeks Palestinian state, IDF pullout within 3 years | The Times of Israel.

 

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas (photo credit: Issam Rimawi/Flash90)

 

alestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas plans to present a framework for renewed peace talks with Israel, according to a Palestinian ex-minister close to Abbas.

In an effort to jumpstart stalled peace talks and expedite the establishment of a Palestinian state, Abbas is preparing to present Israel with a specific timetable for talks and a detailed set of demands.

According to former PA minister of religious affairs Mahmoud al-Habash, the plan calls for new talks over a maximum of nine months, which would secure an Israeli withdrawal from the agreed-upon territory slated for the future Palestinian state in no more than three years.

Abbas is reportedly demanding that the chief issue of contention between the sides, the location of the borders between the two states, be determined at the start of talks. The first three months would be devoted to establishing the borders, and the following six months for the remaining issues, including refugees, Jerusalem, settlements, security arrangements and water, Habash said, according to the Ynet news site.

During the talks, Abbas will demand the freezing of settlement construction and the implementation of the fourth phase of the prisoner release that was called off as the previous talks broke down earlier this year.

Abbas is slated to present his plan to the upcoming gathering of Arab League foreign ministers in Cairo on September 7. PA chief negotiator Saeb Erekat and intelligence chief Majed Faraj have met with European leaders and are slated to travel to Washington to present the plan to senior American officials.

As The Times of Israel reported Monday, Abbas envisions filing a request with the Americans to pressure Israel to present a map of a future Palestinian state as the basis for substantive negotiations. After Israel presents the map, Abbas’s plan calls for the Israeli withdrawal according to the three-year timetable, and the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.

If Israel rejects or delays resuming talks under Abbas’s proposed framework, the PLO, headed by Abbas, would turn to unilateral moves, including appeals to the International Criminal Court against Israeli policies and officials.

In such a scenario, Abbas intends to apply all the diplomatic means at his disposal to pressure Israel, including, within three months, to seek a UN Security Council resolution that recognizes the establishment of a Palestinian state on the 1967 lines.

Since the Palestinians expect the US to veto any Security Council resolution, they intend to then approach the General Assembly with the same request. After that, the PLO will seek to join international bodies and organizations, and then to campaign to have Palestine recognized as a nation under occupation according to the Geneva Conventions.

If none of those moves achieves Abbas’s goal of the declaration of a Palestinian state, he threatens to halt joint security operations with Israel, so central to the recent relative calm in the West Bank, and hand over all responsibility for rule in Palestinian cities to the IDF.

Were that to happen, the PA would effectively, if not formally, cease to function.

Ending joint security operations is still a long way off and, at this stage, there could yet be changes, developments, and restructuring of the Abbas plan. But, for Abbas and his close confidants, matters are clear: Israel has until the end of the calendar year to decide whether or not it intends to present a map of the future Palestine. If the answer is negative, a diplomatic confrontation between the PA and Israel will be unavoidable, and will also lead to the cessation of the joint security apparatus.