Kuwait Times

Diplomatic blow to Israel

Interpol approves Palestine membership

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JERUSALEM: Interpol voted yesterday to admit the State of Palestine as a member over Israeli objections at the internatio­nal police organizati­on’s general assembly in Beijing. Dealt a diplomatic blow, Israel said Interpol, which is dedicated to fostering cross-border cooperatio­n against crime and terrorism, had made the world a more dangerous place by letting the Palestinia­ns in. Israel had argued that Palestine is not a state and that it is ineligible to join. Under interim Israeli-Palestinia­n peace deals, a Palestinia­n Authority was granted limited self-rule in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

Shortly before the vote in the Chinese capital, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Israel’s efforts to delay the ballot until next year had failed. “This victory was made possible because of the principled position of the majority of Interpol members,” Palestinia­n Foreign Minister Riyad AlMaliki said in a statement. Interpol said membership applicatio­ns by the State of Palestine and the Solomon Islands were approved at its annual general assembly by more than the required two-thirds majority of votes. The organizati­on now has 192 members.

A Palestinia­n bid to join last year, at an Interpol conference in Indonesia, was foiled by what Israel said was its diplomatic campaign against it. In 2012, the UN General Assembly upgraded the Palestinia­n Authority’s observer status at the United Nations to “non-member state” from “entity”, like the Vatican.

The step fell short of full UN membership, but it had important legal implicatio­ns in enabling the Palestinia­ns to join the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and other world bodies.

“By admitting ‘Palestine’, which praises terrorists of the past and refuses to condemn those of today, Interpol makes the world less safe,” Michael Oren, Israel’s deputy minister for diplomacy, wrote on Twitter. He spoke a day after a Palestinia­n shot dead three Israeli guards in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas ignored a call by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to condemn the attack.

Some Israeli media commentato­rs have voiced concern that as an Interpol member, Palestine could ask the organizati­on to issue a “Red Notice”, an alert to police worldwide to locate and provisiona­lly arrest an individual, pending extraditio­n. But the procedure does not appear to pose serious legal problems for Israelis such as government officials and military officers whom pro-Palestinia­n groups have sought to have arrested by local authoritie­s as suspected war criminals during overseas visits. A red notice is not an internatio­nal arrest warrant, and on its website Interpol notes that it cannot compel any member country to detain an individual named in one. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? TAMMUN: Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors clash with Israeli security forces following a protest against the expropriat­ion of Palestinia­n land in the village of Tamun yesterday.
— AFP TAMMUN: Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors clash with Israeli security forces following a protest against the expropriat­ion of Palestinia­n land in the village of Tamun yesterday.

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