United Nations: The Palestinians will launch a bid to become a full member of the United Nations even though such a move will be blocked by the United States, the Palestinian foreign minister said Tuesday.
The Palestinians have the status of non-member observer state at the world body and full membership would amount to international recognition of Palestinian statehood.
Any request to become a UN member-state must first be approved by the Security Council, where the United States has veto power, before it is endorsed by the General Assembly.
“We know that we are going to face a US veto but that won’t prevent us from presenting our application for full UN membership,” Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al-Maliki told journalists here Tuesday.
The Palestinians will begin lobbying Security Council members with a view to presenting the application for UN membership in ‘a few weeks’, informed Maliki.
The Palestinians presented a request for UN membership in 2011, but the application never came before the Security Council for a vote.
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas addressed a ceremony at the United Nations marking the start of the Palestinian chair of the Group of 77 and China, raising their profile by leading the biggest UN bloc of developing countries.
Abbas charged that Israel was hampering development in the Middle East and renewed his commitment to a two-state solution.
“Israel’s continued colonization and occupation of the state of Palestine undermines our development and capacity for cooperation, coordination and obstructs the cohesive future development of all peoples of the region,” Abbas told the gathering.
The Palestinians had reacted furiously to President Donald Trump’s decision in December 2017 to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, breaking with the international consensus that the status of the city would be decided in negotiations. Abbas has broken off ties with the Trump administration since then while the United States has also cut hundreds of millions of dollars in aid for the Palestinians.
AFP