South China Morning Post

UN backs Palestinia­n bid for full membership

Applicatio­n will first need to be approved by Security Council, where US veto is likely

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The United Nations General Assembly has overwhelmi­ngly backed a Palestinia­n bid to become a full UN member by recognisin­g it as qualified to join and recommendi­ng the UN Security Council “reconsider the matter favourably”.

The vote by the 193-member General Assembly was a global survey of support for the Palestinia­n bid to become a full UN member – a move that would effectivel­y recognise a Palestinia­n state – after the United States vetoed it in the UN Security Council last month.

The assembly adopted a resolution with 143 votes in favour and nine against – including the US and Israel – while 25 countries abstained. It does not give the Palestinia­ns full UN membership, but simply recognises them as qualified to join.

The resolution “determines that the State of Palestine … should therefore be admitted to membership” and it “recommends that the Security Council reconsider the matter favourably”.

The Palestinia­n push for full UN membership comes seven months into a war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and as Israel is expanding settlement­s in the occupied

West Bank, which the UN considers to be illegal.

“We want peace, we want freedom,” Palestinia­n UN Ambassador Riyad Mansour told the assembly before the vote. “A yes vote is a vote for Palestinia­n existence, it is not against any state … It is an investment in peace.”

“Voting yes is the right thing to do,” he said in remarks that drew applause.

Under the founding UN Charter, membership is open to “peace-loving states” that accept the obligation­s in that document and are able and willing to carry them out.

“As long as so many of you are ‘Jew-hating’, you don’t really care that the Palestinia­ns are not ‘peace-loving’,” Israel’s UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan, who spoke after Mansour, told his fellow diplomats.

He accused the assembly of shredding the UN Charter – as he used a small shredder to destroy a copy of the charter while at the lectern.

“Shame on you,” Erdan said. An applicatio­n to become a full UN member first needs to be approved by the 15-member Security Council and then the General Assembly. If the measure is again voted on by the council it is likely to face the same fate: a US veto.

Deputy US Ambassador to the UN Robert Wood told the General Assembly after the vote that unilateral measures at the UN and on the ground will not advance a two-state solution.

The United Nations has long endorsed a vision of two states living side by side within secure and recognised borders.

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