UN flags fly
© www.charismanews.comWill the Palestinian flag be among these?
The General Assembly is set to vote at 1900 GMT on a draft resolution which would allow Palestine and the Vatican to raise their flags at UN headquarters in New York.

The United Nations on Thursday is expected to allow the Palestinians to raise their flag at its headquarters in New York, in a symbolic move highlighting Palestinian aspirations for statehood. The General Assembly is set to vote at 3:00 pm (1900 GMT) on a draft resolution that diplomats say is almost certain to garner a majority in the 193-nation forum.

"It is a symbolic thing, but another step to solidify the pillars of the state of Palestine in the international arena," said Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian representative to the UN. The resolution would allow the flags of Palestine and the Holy See - both of which have non-member observer status - to be hoisted alongside those of the member states.


Comment: The flag-flying resolution, which diplomats said the Palestinians were expected to circulate [...] had apparently been prepared without the explicit consent of the Vatican's mission to the United Nations. In a note circulated to some UN members and seen by Reuters, the Vatican made clear that while it did not object to the Palestinians proposing a resolution to fly their own flag, the Holy See had no plans to join the initiative...


If adopted, the UN would have 20 days to implement the move, which would be in time for a visit by president Mahmud Abbas on September 30. Mansour said the initiative had the potential to "give our people some hope that the international community is still supporting the independence of the state of Palestine.

"Things are bleak, gloomy, the political process is dead, Gaza is being suffocated. This flag resolution is like the small light of a candle to keep hope alive for the Palestinian people." Mansour said Palestinians have been lobbying intensively in recent weeks to round up the needed votes.

When Palestine gained non-member observer status on November 29, 2012, it was by a vote in the General Assembly of 138-9, with 41 abstentions. Diplomats says the only unknown is how broad support for the resolution will be, and in particular the attitude of the Europeans who have been divided over the initiative.

Both Israel and the United States have expressed strong opposition, with Israel's ambassador to the body Ron Prosor slamming "a blatant attempt to hijack the UN." Prosor this week accused the Palestinians of trying to "score easy and meaningless points at the UN." He had asked UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and General Assembly president Ron Kutesa to block the move, which would break with the UN practice of flying only the flags of member states

US State Department spokesman Mark Toner called it a "counterproductive" attempt to pursue statehood claims outside of a negotiated settlement. Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are among world leaders converging on UN headquarters from September 25 for an anti-poverty summit and the annual General Assembly debate.

Pope Francis is to make a much-anticipated address on September 25. The Vatican has officially recognized Palestine as a state. The Vatican said it would abide by the decision of the General Assembly. But it also noted that the tradition at the United Nations was to fly the flags of full members.

Palestinian premier Rami Hamdallah said after talks with French Prime Minister Manuel Valls in Paris that the move was "a step on the road towards Palestine becoming a full member of the United Nations". Hamdallah also told Valls he hoped France would one day "recognise a Palestinian state" - something Paris so far refuses to do. Asked about the possibility of resuming peace talks with Israel, the premier said he saw no point unless the issue of Israeli settlements was addressed.

"We do not want to negotiate for the sake of it. If there are negotiations, we want them to have a framework," he said. "The most important thing is that settlement building must stop. All of the agreements that we have signed with Israel foresaw the end of settlement building, but in fact it is extending further and further, and it will end by killing off the idea of a two-state solution."

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks have been comatose since a failed US diplomatic effort in April last year, and a war in the Gaza Strip last summer left 2,200 Palestinians dead.