Jordan to present amended Palestinian statehood resolution to UN

Erekat: Proposal is being made on behalf of Palestinians and Arab countries.

A United Nations Security Council meeting at UN headquarters in New York. (photo credit: REUTERS)
A United Nations Security Council meeting at UN headquarters in New York.
(photo credit: REUTERS)
The Palestinian resolution calling for an Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines will be presented to the United Nations Security Council on Monday, according to Chief PLO Negotiator Saeb Erekat.
Erekat said on Sunday eight amendments have been introduced to the original draft resolution, adding that the Security Council would vote on it Tuesday or Wednesday. He pointed out that Jordan would present the amended resolution on behalf of the Palestinians and Arab countries.
Palestinian efforts to win support for the resolution would continue “until the last minute,” Erekat said, repeating earlier threats that the Palestinians would join international organizations and treaties if the US chooses to veto the resolution, which calls for setting a timeline for Israel’s withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines.
At least nine votes are needed for the resolution to pass. It was not clear by Sunday night whether the Palestinians had succeeded in winning the backing of nine members of the Security Council.
Although Erekat said changes have been introduced to the resolution, a senior Palestinian official in Ramallah said it was not different from the original one.
Ahmed Majdalani, secretary- general of the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, said the original draft resolution, which was made public last week, complies with the national rights of the Palestinians. Attempts to change the wording of the original draft resolution have been strongly opposed by the US, he said, predicting that the US and Israel would exert pressure on members of the Security Council to refrain from voting in favor of the resolution.
Several Palestinian groups have voiced opposition to the original draft resolution under the pretext that it does not meet the aspirations of the Palestinians.
They claim the resolution equates Israel and the Palestinians and is “ambiguous” on issues such as settlements, Jerusalem, refugees, prisoners and borders.
Hamas called on the Palestinian Authority leadership to withdraw the resolution from the Security Council and “acknowledge” the failure of the peace process.
It warned that the proposed resolution includes “dangerous concessions” on the rights of the Palestinians, and criticized the resolution’s reference to Jerusalem as a “shared capital” of two states, saying the city will remain the capital of a Palestinian state only.

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Hamas said it also was opposed to the content of the resolution because it does not allow “future Palestinian demands to Palestine.”
Khaledah Jarrar, a senior member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said her group was opposed to the resolution because it does not meet Palestinian rights to self-determination and the establishment of a sovereign state with east Jerusalem as its capital.
Bassam al-Salhi, leader of the Palestinian People’s Party (formerly the Communist party), called for an emergency meeting of the Palestinian leadership to revise the resolution, saying the Palestinians must withdraw the resolution unless it is amended to meet the aspirations of the Palestinians.