Thousands
of Palestinians cheering and waving flags gave President Mahmoud Abbas a hero's
welcome in the West Bank Sunday, as he told them triumphantly a
"Palestinian Spring" had been born following his historic speech to
the U.N. last week.
Abbas' popularity
has skyrocketed since he asked the U.N. on Friday to recognize Palestinian
independence, defying appeals from Israel and the United States to return to
peace talks. His request has pushed the region into uncharted waters, and left
the international community scrambling over how to respond.
Thousands
of people crowded Abbas' West Bank headquarters in the city of Ramallah to get
a glimpse of the 76-year-old president upon his return from New York. Abbas was
uncharacteristically animated, shaking his hands and waving to the audience.
Abbas
compared his campaign to the Arab Spring, the mass demonstrations sweeping the
Arab world in hopes of freedom, saying that an independent Palestinian state is
inevitable.
"We
have told the world that there is the Arab Spring, but the Palestinian Spring
has been born," he said. "A popular spring, a populist spring, a
spring of peaceful struggle that will reach its goal."
He warned
that the Palestinians face a "long path" ahead. "There are those
who would put out obstacles ... but with your presence they will fall and we
will reach our end."
The
Palestinians want an independent state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the
Gaza Strip, territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war.
Israel says
it's ready for peace talks, but has rejected Palestinian calls to freeze
construction of Jewish settlements in lands claimed by the Palestinians.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also rejected Palestinian demands
that the borders between Israel and a future Palestine be based on the 1967
pre-war lines.
Abbas last
week asked the U.N. Security Council to grant the Palestinians full U.N.
membership. The Security Council is expected to study the request for several
weeks before making a decision, though the U.S. - Israel's closest ally - has
promised to veto the request if it proceeds.
As an
alternative, the Palestinians say they will seek lesser observer status in the
General Assembly - short of full statehood but a position that would allow them
to join international bodies where they could push their agenda against Israel.
The
international Quartet of Mideast mediators - the U.S., EU, Russia and U.N. -
last week issued a statement calling for a resumption of peace talks without
preconditions and a target for a final agreement by the end of 2012.
Abbas has
signaled he will reject the Quartet's plan, while Israel has hinted it accepts
it.
Related Article:
Abbas returns to hero's welcome
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| Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas waves to Palestinians as they welcome him at his Ramallah headquarters Sunday. |

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