VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   News   ‘Bid for Palestinian statehood lacking Palestinian mandate’  
MORE ON THE STORY
Qalandia: Palestinian youths try to remove barbed wire during clashes with Israeli forces at the Qalandia checkpoint between Jerusalem and Ramallah on September 23, 2011. (AFP Photo/Menahem Kahana) 23.09.2011, 18:36 6 comments

Tear gas fired on West Bank protesters: RT inside report

Clashes at a checkpoint between Israel and Palestine have continued into the night, with Israeli forces firing tear gas at Palestinian demonstrators. Meanwhile, one Palestinian has been killed in a Palestinian village attacked by Israeli settlers.

Palestinian statehood
Palestinians gather in the West Bank city of Ramallah to watch a wide screen relaying live footage of a historic bid for statehood by Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas (portraits) at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on September 23, 2011 (AFP Photo / ALESSIO ROMENZI) 24.09.2011, 05:00

Security in West Bank under control but tensions remain high

Mahmoud Abbas addressed the UN General Assembly amid simmering tensions on the Palestinian-Israeli border. Israelis fired tear gas at the demonstration supporting the Palestinian statehood bid and Israeli settlers attacked a Palestinian village.

Palestinian statehood
Quartet on the Middle East members, former British Prime Minsiter Tony Blair (L), US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (2ndL), Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (2ndR), and EU Commissioner Catherine Ashton (R) meet with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, at the United Nations during the General debate of the 66th General Assembly on September 23, 2011 (AFP Photo / HENNY RAY ABRAMS) 24.09.2011, 01:29 10 comments

Quartet presents plan to avoid US veto on Palestinian bid

The Middle East Quartet has called on the Israelis and Palestinians to meet within the next month to resume stalled peace talks.

Palestinian statehood
US: Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas hands over a formal letter for Palestine to be admitted as a state to the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon in New York, September 23, 2011. (AFP Photo/Emmanuel Dunand) 23.09.2011, 20:25 13 comments

Abbas submits Palestine statehood bid, gets ovation at UN

Palestinian National Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has submitted an official bid to the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon for Palestinian admission to the United Nations as a full member.

Palestinian statehood
Qalandia: Israeli soldiers keep their position during clashes with Palestinian stone throwers at the Qalandia checkpoint between the West Bank city of Ramallah and Jerusalem. (TOPSHOTS / AFP Photo / Ahmad Gharabli) 23.09.2011, 11:44 6 comments

Palestine and Israel in for unsettling times

The crucial moment for Palestine’s statehood is just hours ahead and Palestinians are taking to the streets, anticipating news from the UN. Israel has put the army on alert expecting clashes with Palestinians, which did not take long to occur.

Palestinian statehood

‘Bid for Palestinian statehood lacking Palestinian mandate’

Published: 24 September, 2011, 06:07
Edited: 26 September, 2011, 08:47

Palestinian protestors hold Fatah and Hamas flags as they clash with Israeli forces following a rally on May 6, 2011, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank village of Bilin, to protest against the Israeli occupation and celebrating the political unity reconciliation deal between the Hamas Islamist movement, which rules the Gaza Strip, and Mahmud Abbas's Fatah party which was signed by the two rival groups in Cairo (AFP Photo / ABBAS MOMANI)

(12.4Mb) embed video

TAGS: Breakaway regions, Conflict, Middle East, Politics, Yulia Shapovalova, Paula Slier, Israel


There has been an outpouring of support for Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in the past few days over his UN bid for Palestine’s statehood, but many are questioning the political implications of this bid, as well as Abbas’ own political future.

­The Palestinian statehood that he is bidding for is far from being a done deal. In fact, the done deal is quite the opposite: the UN Security Council will not recognize the Palestinian state.

Alvaro De Soto, a senior fellow at the Ralph Bunche Institute in New York, says that a lot will depend on how Palestinian leaders handle the situation when their people realize that Palestine will remain occupied.

“Palestinian territory will remain occupied, and I don’t think that the occupation will come to an end without negotiations with Israel,” he told RT. “I hope that Palestinians will react with serenity, and I hope that their leaders will explain to them that this is only one more stage in the efforts to obtain liberation from occupation… So, it really depends on how leadership handles it. They have to build a case that they are in fact ready and mature to take on the responsibilities of respecting their neighbors and ensuring that there are no attacks from their territory.”


embed video

In this regard, questions are being asked about Abbas's long-term political future, particularly given the fact that Hamas has not come on board. Earlier, Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh criticized his efforts to get UN recognition, adding that the Palestinians should not “beg” for statehood in the UN, as this organization is controlled by the “Americans and others” and its political orientation is not “beneficial.”

Provided Hamas, which governs the Gaza portion of the Palestinian Territories, and the leadership in the West Bank disagree over such crucial issues, many are questioning the potential ability of a Palestinian state to function.

Lisa Albrecht, associate professor at the University of Minnesota, who has extensive experience of working with both Palestinian and Jewish grass-roots activists in the Middle East, addresses the same issues. She says that there has not been a real Palestinian mandate for the statehood.

“It would go back to 1967 borders – that’s losing 70 per cent of historic Palestine,” she told RT. “So, certainly, Hamas doesn’t stand by it, the National Boycott Committee doesn’t stand by it, the Palestinian Youth movement doesn’t stand by it… To show pictures of all those Palestinians celebrating in Ramallah isn’t entirely true, because we are not seeing pictures of people who think a bid for statehood isn’t going to make freedom happen there.”


embed video

­Another point of criticism toward Abbas comes in view of today’s decision of the Middle East Quartet to have the Palestinians and Israelis return to the table within the next month. There are those who believe that Abbas has given in to pressure from both the United States and Israel. They say that there needs to be a vote in the United Nations over Palestine’s bid for statehood – and that this vote should already have taken place.

0 (0 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Palestinians gather in the West Bank city of Ramallah to watch a wide screen relaying live footage of a historic bid for statehood by Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas (portraits) at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on September 23, 2011 (AFP Photo / ALESSIO ROMENZI) 24.09.2011, 05:00

Security in West Bank under control but tensions remain high

Mahmoud Abbas addressed the UN General Assembly amid simmering tensions on the Palestinian-Israeli border. Israelis fired tear gas at the demonstration supporting the Palestinian statehood bid and Israeli settlers attacked a Palestinian village.

Palestinian statehood
Mahmud Abbas and Barack Obama (AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan) 24.09.2011, 07:13 8 comments

‘US shouldn’t be part of talks over Palestine’s statehood’

Lisa Albrecht, associate professor at the University of Minnesota with extensive experience of working with both Palestinian and Jewish grass-roots activists, says the USA is not neutral and hence should not decide Palestine’s future.

Palestinian statehood