UN strongly approves Palestinian proposal to raise flag at HQ

Activists wave Palestinian flags as Pope Francis celebrates the Angelus noon prayer from his studio window overlooking St. Peter's square at the Vatican on Thursday
Activists wave Palestinian flags as Pope Francis celebrates the Angelus noon prayer from his studio window overlooking St. Peter's square at the Vatican on Thursday
block
AP, United Nations :
The United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution Thursday allowing the Palestinians and the Holy See to raise their flags at UN headquarters – a symbolic step pursued by the Palestinians in their quest for an independent state.
Israel strongly objected to the proposal and joined seven other countries, including the United States, in voting “no”; 119 nations voted “yes” and 45 abstained.
Canada, Australia and several small island states also voted “no”. Europe was divided with France, Italy, Spain, Sweden and Poland among those voting “yes” while Britain, Germany, the Baltic states and others abstained.
The resolution allows non-member observer states to raise their flags alongside those of the 193 UN member states. The Palestinians and the Vatican are the only two observers, but the Holy See has backed away from the effort, saying it will not raise its flag before Pope Francis visits the UN later this month.
With Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations stalled and little prospect of a two-state solution emerging, the Palestinians have successfully pursued symbolic recognition as a state at the United Nations – winning General Assembly approval in late 2012 to raise their status from an observer to a non-member observer state, by a vote of 138 in favour and nine against.
That has allowed the Palestinians to join UN bodies, including its cultural organization Unesco, and many international treaties, including the Rome Statute that established the International Criminal Court.
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador, hailed the “historic vote”, calling it “another step towards fulfilment of the promise of independence made to the Palestinian people nearly seven decades ago.”
He said last week that the Palestinians would like President Mahmoud Abbas to raise their flag after he addresses the General Assembly’s annual gathering of world leaders Sept 30.
“Of course we know that raising our flag will neither end the (Israeli) occupation nor solve the conflict immediately,” Mansour said. “But raising the flag will signal to our people everywhere … that their freedom is inevitable, and the international community supports them in their journey for justice.”
Israel’s UN Ambassador Ron Prosor called the goal of the resolution “a photo op”, saying it will not advance prospects for peace, but in his final speech at the United Nations he looked forward to that day.
block