The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­ns welcome decision on Hebron,

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The Palestinia­ns on Friday overwhelmi­ngly welcomed UNESCO’s decision to add Hebron’s Old City including the Tomb of Patriarchs, which Muslims call the Ibrahimi Mosque, to its list of world heritage sites.

Palestinia­n Authority Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki called the decision “a success in the diplomatic battle Palestine is fighting on all fronts.”

“Despite the fierce Israeli campaign, spreading of lies, the distortion and falsificat­ion of facts regarding Palestinia­n rights, the world approved our right to register Hebron and the Ibrahimi Mosque as a world heritage site under Palestinia­n sovereignt­y,” Maliki told Wafa, the official PA news site, in a statement.

The UNESCO decision does not explicitly state if Hebron’s Old City is under Palestinia­n sovereignt­y. However, a list of world heritage sites on UNESCO’s website refers to Hebron’s Old City as being in Palestine.

PA President Mahmoud Abbas alluded to the UNESCO decision as an “accomplish­ment.”

“Thanks to calm Palestinia­n diplomacy and the support of our people, brothers, and friends in the world,” UNESCO approved Hebron as a world heritage site, Abbas said in statement following a meeting with the head of the Tunisian parliament Muhammad Ennaceur in Tunis.

Despite American and Israeli protests, the Palestinia­ns joined UNESCO in October 2011. Since then, the UN body has inscribed three sites in the Palestinia­n territorie­s on its list of world heritage sites: The Church of the Nativity, the site where Christians believe Jesus was born; Battir, a village that features Roman-era water systems; and now Hebron’s Old City.

Hamas praised UNESCO for its decision.

“UNESCO’s vote to include Hebron on its world heritage sites’ list is another affirmatio­n of our full right to Hebron and all the Palestinia­n land,” Hamas spokesman Hazim Qassim said in a statement. “The voting process reveals the falsity of the Israeli narrative and the lie of its propaganda; all the occupation’s attempts to upend facts will not succeed in the face of our people holding onto its right to its land.”

In a secret ballot, 12 UNESCO members voted in favor of including Hebron’s Old City on the organizati­on’s list of world heritage sites, whereas three rejected it and six others abstained.

PA Tourism Ministry spokesman Jarees Qumsieh on Saturday told The Jerusalem Post that his ministry hopes to include more sites in the Palestinia­n territorie­s on UNESCO’s list of world heritage sites.

Qumsieh said that deliberati­ons to add the Tell al-Sultan archeologi­cal site in Jericho to the world heritage sites’ list have already commenced.

 ?? (Tiksa Negeri/Reuters) ?? PA PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas is welcomed by Amina Mohammad, deputy secretary-general of the UN, at the African Union headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa on Monday.
(Tiksa Negeri/Reuters) PA PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas is welcomed by Amina Mohammad, deputy secretary-general of the UN, at the African Union headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa on Monday.

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