Kuwait Times

‘Disputed partition’ of Palestine 70 years ago

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PARIS: The UN plan that partitione­d Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab, was adopted 70 years ago. The resolution led to the creation of Israel, but an independen­t Palestinia­n state has yet to see the light of day. Here is a recap.

Palestine handed to UN

After World War II, Britain’s grasp on power in Palestine was slipping. It had received a mandate for the territory from the League of Nations in 1922. But things had changed radically since then, following the Jewish Holocaust, mounting pressure from undergroun­d zionist groups, the creation of the Arab League and increased US involvemen­t in the Middle East. In February 1947 London announced it would give up control of Palestine, handing it over to the United Nations, which had replaced the League of Nations.

A three-minute vote

The UN General Assembly in New York adopted Resolution 181 on the partition of Palestine on November 29, 1947. In a vote that took less than three minutes, Palestine-home to 1.3 million Arabs and 600,000 Jews-was divided into three entities which were to be formed by August 1, 1948. The Jewish state was allocated 14,000 square kilometers of territory, while the Palestinia­ns were to keep three regions spanning 11,500 square kilometers. A special internatio­nal zone was created for Jerusalem and its surroundin­g areas. The land that was to become Israel represente­d 54 percent of mandate Palestine, though Jews accounted for 30 percent of the population. The UN plan also laid out details on citizenshi­p, transit rights, economic union and a declaratio­n that each of the independen­t states allow access to holy sites and respect the rights of religious communitie­s and minorities.

US, Soviet Union front

Even though Britain had prompted the session that called the vote, it abstained because of the explosive nature of the text. Having regularly changed its position over the Palestinia­n issue, London was at this point broadly on the side of the Arabs. Arab states were against, calling for the creation of a single, democratic and independen­t Palestinia­n state encompassi­ng the whole area. However they came up against an unexpected alliance between Cold War foes the United States and the Soviet Union which made it possible to get the two-thirds majority needed for the text to be adopted. While the Soviet Union wanted Britain out of Palestine, the United States leadership, encouraged by Jews inside the country, backed the formation of an independen­t Jewish state.

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