http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=anFoSkEqxcxQ

Palestinian Leaders May Seek UN Backing for Independent State

By Massoud A. Derhally

Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Palestinian leaders will meet Dec. 15 to discuss healing 
the rift between the Hamas and Fatah factions and a plan to seek United Nations 
recognition of an independent Palestinian state.

“We will discuss reconciliation between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority’s 
Fatah party, Israel’s continued construction of illegal settlements, the expiry 
of the president’s term and may decide on a plan that demands United Nations 
recognition,” Munib Masri, a Palestine Central Council member, said in an 
interview yesterday on a flight from Amman to Beirut.

“We will ask the UN Security Council to endorse a two- state solution with east 
Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state, to compensate Palestinian 
refugees and affirm their right to return to their homeland,” said Masri. 
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas will attend the council meeting, 
which will probably be held in the West Bank.

The council wants Israel to return to the borders it had prior to the 1967 
Middle East war. If a Palestinian state isn’t within reach, the Palestinian 
Authority should be dissolved, he said.

“If Israel remains steadfast in building settlements, then we will seek a 
one-state solution that is based on a timetable,” Masri said, referring to an 
agreement under which Palestinians and Israelis would share power in a single 
state.

Palestinians, who seek to establish an independent state in the West Bank and 
Gaza Strip, areas that were captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war, 
have made a total construction freeze on settlements by Israel a condition for 
resuming peace talks.

Settlements Still Expanding

Abbas has said an Israeli initiative to halt settlement expansions for 10 
months is insufficient because it allows for construction in east Jerusalem and 
the completion of 3,000 homes in the West Bank already approved for building.

President Barack Obama has sought to revive peace talks by demanding Israeli 
curbs on West Bank settlements.

“I want President Barack Obama to be brave and stick to his principles and 
understand that a solution to the Palestinian conflict is in America’s national 
security interest,” Masri said.

“If we see that a two-state solution is not in the horizon, then the PA should 
be dismantled and the Palestinian people should decide this through a 
referendum,” said Masri, who was a confidante of former Palestinian Authority 
President Yasser Arafat.

Last month, Abbas said he was withdrawing from elections scheduled for January, 
adding a new hurdle to Middle East peace efforts and triggering speculation 
about who might succeed him.

The Abbas Vacuum

Abbas, who succeeded Arafat in 2005, has faced growing Palestinian criticism, 
especially after agreeing in October to postpone a United Nations debate on a 
report accusing Israel and Hamas of committing war crimes during their 
three-week conflict in the Gaza Strip earlier this year. He later reversed 
himself, and the UN General Assembly on Nov. 5 adopted a resolution calling for 
Israeli and Palestinian authorities to begin probes within three months.

Masri said the planned council meeting wants to determine how to avoid a vacuum 
after Abbas’s presidential term expires.

Masri, who headed a delegation of independent Palestinians in March at meetings 
in Cairo to reconcile Hamas with Abbas’s Fatah party, said ending the rift 
among the two is imperative to realizing a Palestinian state and dealing with 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“In the absence of reconciliation, the worst is to come because of Netanyahu’s 
intransigent government,” Masri said. “The West Bank, Jerusalem and Gaza should 
be one connected territory.”

The Islamic Hamas movement, which controls Gaza, has challenged the legitimacy 
of Abbas’s West Bank-based government, and Egyptian-mediated efforts to 
reconcile them haven’t been successful. Hamas, which seized control of Gaza in 
June 2007, routing the Fatah forces of Abbas, has said it will bar Gaza 
residents from voting in January elections.

Masri, 73, is the chairman of Palestine Development and Investment Ltd., the 
largest private investor by initial investment in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 
He was ranked the 44th richest Arab with a net worth of $1.6 billion, according 
to a survey by Arabian Business magazine last year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Massoud A. Derhally in Beirut, Lebanon 
at [email protected]
Last Updated: December 9, 2009 04:05 EST 


      

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