U.S. blocks Palestinian request for full UN membership - Action News
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U.S. blocks Palestinian request for full UN membership

TheUnited States has voted against a Palestinian request for fullUnited Nations membership,blocking the world body from effectively recognizing a Palestinian state.

Move prevents the world body from effectively recognizing a Palestinian state

U.S. vetoes Palestinian request for full UN membership

5 months ago
Duration 1:00
The United States has used its position as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council to veto a Palestinian request for full membership into the United Nations. The final tally of the vote was 12 in favour, two abstentions and one against.

TheUnitedStateson Thursday effectively stopped theUnitedNations from recognizing a Palestinian state by casting a veto in the Security Council to deny the Palestinian Authorityfull membershipof the world body.

TheUnitedStatessays an independent Palestinian state should be established through direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority and not through UNaction.

It vetoed adraftresolution that recommendedto the 193-memberUNGeneralAssembly that "the state of Palestine be admitted to membership of theUnitedNations."Britain and Switzerland abstained,while the remaining 12 council members voted in favour.

The office of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said in a statement Thursday the U.S. veto was "unfair,unethical andunjustified."

The Palestinians are currently a non-member observer state, a de facto recognition of statehood that was granted by the UNGeneral Assembly in 2012. But an application to become a full UNmember needs to be approved by the Security Council and then at least two-thirds of the General Assembly.

The Palestinian push for fullmembership comes six months into a war betweenIsrael and Hamas in Gazaand as Israel is expanding settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

"Recent escalations make it even more important to support good-faith efforts to find lasting peace between Israel and a fully independent, viable and sovereign Palestinian state," UNSecretary-General Antonio Guterres told the councilearlier on Thursday.

"Failure to make progress towards a two-state solution will only increase volatility and risk for hundreds of millions of people across the region, who will continue to liveunder the constant threat of violence."

A man in a suit with a blue tie carries binders under his arm as he exits a large, packed conference room.
Ziad Abu-Amr, member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, exits the chamber after U.S. Deputy Ambassador to the United Nations Robert Wood voted against members of the Security Council allowing Palestinian UN membership during a Security Council meeting at UN headquarters In New York on Thursday. (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

Israel's UNAmbassador Gilad Erdan said Palestinians failed to meetthe criteriato become a full member, which he outlined as: a permanent population, defined territory, government and capacity to enter relations with otherstates.

"Who is the council voting to 'recognize' and give full membership status to? Hamas in Gaza? The Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Nablus? Who?" Erdan asked the Security Councilearlier on Thursday.

He said granting full UNmembership to Palestinians "will have zero positive impact for any party, that will cause only destruction for years to come, and harm any chance for future dialogue."

The UNSecurity Council has long endorsed a vision of twostatesliving side by side within secure and recognized borders. Palestinians want a state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, all territory captured by Israel in 1967. The Security Council passed a resolution in the wake of that war, known as the Six Day War, calling for Israel's withdrawal from the territories in exchange for a guarantee of peace from Arab countries and recognition of thestate of Israel, a framework that formed the basis of future peace talks but never came to fruition.

The Palestinian Authority exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank. Hamas seized control ofGaza in 2007 after winning a majorityin legislative council elections in the West Bank andGaza in 2006 and splitting with itsrival faction Fatah.

Ziad Abu Amr, special envoy of Abbas,earlier askedtheU.S.: "How could this damage the prospects of peace between Palestinians and Israelis? How could this recognition and this membership harm international peace and security?"

"Those who are trying to disrupt and hinder the adoption of such a resolution ... are not helping the prospects of peace between Palestinians and Israelis and the prospects for peace in the Middle East in general," he told the Security Council.

Abu Amr said full Palestinian UNmembership was not an alternative to serious political negotiations to implement a two-state solution and resolve pending issues.

"However, this resolution will grant hope to the Palestinian people, hope for a decent life within an independent state."