The Jerusalem Post

UNESCO set to reject Israeli sovereignt­y on all Jerusalem

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF (Reuters)

Israel fears Europe might abstain or support a resolution that would reject Israeli sovereignt­y over all of Jerusalem, which UNESCO’s executive board in Paris is likely to vote on at its meeting on Tuesday, diplomatic sources told The Jerusalem Post.

Representa­tives from European nations and Arab states held consultati­ons in Paris on Thursday to agree on a common text for Tuesday’s meeting.

If the text has European support, Israel fears it would be more difficult to sway other executive board members to reject that resolution or any other anti-Israel clauses in the text.

Israel is concerned that such a text would delegitimi­ze the government of the Jewish state. The main governing bodies – the Knesset, Prime Minister’s Office, Foreign Ministry and Supreme Court – are all located in the capital city of Jerusalem.

“A significan­t and active

partnershi­p has emerged between the Europeans and the Arabs to design an Arab document that is anti-Israeli and anti-Jewish, that rejects Israeli sovereignt­y in Jerusalem and harms our holy places,” Israel’s Ambassador to UNESCO in Paris Carmel Shama-Hacohen told the Post.

He added that the cynicism of pushing forward such a resolution on Israel’s Independen­ce Day is the kind of tactic one would expect from Arab states, but not European ones.

“When more and more nations are moving to Israel’s side, our European friends that intimately know our history, and that of the Jewish people, have decided to join forces with the Arab nations against the State of Israel,” he said.

The EU Embassy in Tel Aviv said the EU tries to avoid “bringing broader political conflicts into these discussion­s.

“The EU generally tries to coordinate positions in UN bodies, and in this process bring texts closer in line with EU policy,” a representa­tive said. “The EU does not have a common position on the text tabled by Palestine and Jordan on Jerusalem, though our mission has shared some suggestion­s for amendments by some member states with the representa­tives of Palestine, Jordan and Israel.”

A diplomatic source added that the objective of the European talks with the Arab states was to find language that set a more moderate tone.

An initial March draft put forward solely by Arab states said: “Any action taken by Israel, the occupying power, to impose its laws, jurisdicti­on, and administra­tion on the city of Jerusalem, are illegal and therefore null and void and have no validity whatsoever.”

This text would mark the first time the UNESCO executive has been asked to reject Israeli sovereignt­y over western Jerusalem, although other UN bodies have used similar language in the past.

Eleven of the 54 UNESCO Executive Board members are EU states. This includes: Estonia, France, Great Britain, Germany, Greece, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherland­s, Slovenia, Spain and Sweden. The United States is also a board member.

It is presumed that the US would oppose the resolution and likely that the UK would do so as well.

The resolution comes as President Donald Trump is weighing the question of relocating the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

The internatio­nal community is split over recognitio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y over west Jerusalem, with many countries acknowledg­ing Israel’s governing bodies there without formally accepting its status as part of Israel. Just last week, Russia recognized west Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. It is not, however, a member of the UNESCO board.

Such a text would highlight Jerusalem’s tenuous political status in the eyes of the internatio­nal community, which already places its embassies in Tel Aviv rather than in Israel’s capital.

Tuesday’s text is also expected to reaffirm that the Jewish holy sites of the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron and Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem are “an integral part of Palestine.” Muslims consider both places to be holy to Islam and

 ??  ?? THE WESTERN Wall. UNESCO is set to vote next week on a resolution rejecting Israeli sovereignt­y over all of Jerusalem.
THE WESTERN Wall. UNESCO is set to vote next week on a resolution rejecting Israeli sovereignt­y over all of Jerusalem.

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