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| Abbas to address U.N. General Assembly |
STORY
HIGHLIGHTS
- Palestinians seek "inalienable, legitimate, national rights," Abbas tells the United Nations
- The Palestinian president formally requests full U.N. membership
- The effort is likely doomed to failure, as the United States has promised to veto it if necessary
- Ahead of the speech, security concerns rise in Jerusalem
United
Nations (CNN) -- Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas urged the United Nations
to recognize Palestine as a full member of the international organization in a
historic speech Friday to the General Assembly in New York.
Israel,
Abbas said, continues to stymie peace, so it is time for the United Nations to
act.
"We
aspire for and seek a greater and more effective role for the United Nations in
working to achieve a just and comprehensive peace in our region that ensures
the inalienable, legitimate national rights of the Palestinian people,"
said Abbas, who was greeted with a long round of applause as he took the
rostrum.
The speech
was closely watched across the Middle East. In Ramallah, hundreds gathered and
raptly watched on big-screen television. They greeted news that he had formally
filed the statehood request with cheers, song and dance.
Less than
an hour after Abbas ends his speech, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
is expected to give a rebuking speech declaring the request a unilateral move
that will only hinder the prospect of true peace in the region.
Mass
demonstrations are planned for Friday in New York and are expected across the
Middle East.
U.S.
Embassies across the region warned citizens to avoid the expected
demonstrations, saying they could turn violent with little warning.
An
increased police presence was visible in Jerusalem, where the military had
stockpiled riot-control gear against the possibility of greater violence.
Ahead of
the speech, Palestinian youths lobbed rocks and bottles at Israeli security
forces at a West Bank security checkpoint leading to Jerusalem, a fairly
routine Friday occurrence.
There were
no injuries, but rock-throwing between Israeli citizens and Palestinians in
Qusra led to three injuries, one of them fatal, according to the Israel Defense
Forces.
Abbas to
formally delivered a letter to the United Nations secretary-general making a
request that Palestine become a member state of the international body.
No
immediate action is expected, and such a U.N. declaration is almost certainly
doomed to failure: In addition to Israel's opposition, the United States has
vowed to veto the effort if necessary in the Security Council.
"Peace
will not come through statements and resolutions at the U.N.," President
Barack Obama said in a speech to delegates at the General Assembly on Thursday.
"If it were that easy, it would have been accomplished by now."
Obama and
Abbas met on Wednesday as part of behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts that
have accompanied the Palestinian statehood request. He said he supports
Palestinian statehood, but reiterated the long-standing U.S. position that
Israel must be part of the discussions.
Israel has
described the bid as counterproductive to the peace process, and has called for
a resumption of talks to begin in New York and to be continued in Ramallah and
Jerusalem.
While a
U.S. veto would block any effort to gain full U.N. membership, the General
Assembly could vote to upgrade the status of Palestinians, who are currently
part of the U.N. as a non-voting observer "entity." The General
Assembly could change that status to permanent observer "state,"
identical to the Vatican's status in the United Nations.
Despite a
breathtaking year of change that has seen popular revolutions mark political
upheaval in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and other nations, talk of Palestinian
statehood has dominated the General Assembly's session this week.
The
membership effort sends a strong message by Abbas to Palestinians that he is
working to advance the Palestinians' cause, said Steven Cook, a senior fellow
for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"Right
now, he's thinking about his domestic political situation in order to maintain
his position," Cook said. "So he's not eaten alive."
CNN's Kevin
Flower and Fionnuala Sweeney contributed to this report.
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