Sunday, June 12, 2011

PA considers 1947 UN Partition Plan if US vetoes state


KHALED ABU TOAMEH
06/12/2011

Nabil Sha'ath says UN Resolution 181 is one of many options PA is considering if US rejects Palestinian statehood bid.

The Palestinian Authority is considering asking the UN to implement Resolution 181, which calls for the partition of mandatory Palestine between Jews and Arabs, if the US foils plans to seek UN recognition of a Palestinian state in September, a senior PA official disclosed on Saturday.

PA negotiator Nabil Sha’ath said the possibility of demanding the implementation of the 1947 Partition Plan was one of a number of options the Palestinians were studying in wake of Washington’s threat to veto a statehood resolution in September. Sha’ath declared that despite the US threat, the PA was determined to proceed with the statehood bid in September.

His declaration came even as some PA officials have been talking, in private, about abandoning the plan to ask the UN to unilaterally recognize a state along the pre- 1967 lines.

Sha’ath’s remarks were published by the London-based Al-Hayat newspaper.

He said there was much the Palestinians could do after Washington vetoes the statehood bid at the UN.

“We have a lot to do, but we won’t reveal our steps now,” he added. “We won’t give the Israelis a chance to confront us at the UN.” But he said that one of the ideas being discussed was “going back to UN Resolution 181.”

He said the Partition Plan called for the establishment of two states, “but Israel announced its independence unilaterally and was recognized by the UN.” He noted that Kosovo did the same in spite of Serbia’s opposition.

“Even if the US uses the veto, there will be 131 UN members that recognize Palestine,” he said. “The US then won’t be able to stop these countries from treating us as a state.”

Comment: A history lesson is in order-this provided by a guest to the paer's post.

UN GA Resolution 181

Author: JBHoren
Country: Fairbanks, AK USA
06/12/2011 03:32


Sorry, but that offer was roundly rejected by the Palestine Higher Arab Committee and the Arab League, and is no longer on the table. But let's be real: The original British Mandate of Palestine had already divided Palestine into two lands, for two peoples: Jordan, for the Arabs, and Palestine, for the Jews. That's it... over-and-done-with. There's nothing for the (sic)Palestinians in Israel -- it's Jordan they should covet... and rightly so.

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