10 Oct 2014

Christian Clerics Beg Europe To Recognize Palestinian State + UK Parliament To Vote On Historic Palestine Motion

Top Palestinian Christian clerics urged European countries to recognize the state of Palestine.
We are tired of negotiations while our people continue to be humiliated by an occupying force,” stated the letter issued by the Palestinian leaders of the Catholic, Greek Orthodox, and Lutheran Churches on Friday.
"Europe has a moral, legal and political duty to hold Israel accountable and support Palestinian non-violent initiatives to end the Israeli occupation, including the recognition of the State of Palestine on the 1967 border with east Jerusalem (al-Quds) as its capital," the letter added.
Zio-Nazi Shill UK Regulator BANNED Press TV: The clerics’ plea comes shortly after Sweden stated it will formally recognize Palestine as a sovereign state.
Meanwhile, the lower house of Britain’s parliament has announced its plan to hold a vote over the recognition of Palestine as a sovereign state on October 13.

On November 29, 2012, the 193-member United Nations General Assembly voted to upgrade Palestine’s status to non-member observer state.
Palestinians are seeking to create an independent state on the territories of the West Bank, East al-Quds, and the Gaza Strip and are demanding that Israel withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories.
Tel Aviv, however, has refused to return to the 1967 borders and is unwilling to discuss the issue of al-Quds.
Similarly, the United States has also rejected Palestinians’ current initiative for seeking recognition.
"We believe international recognition of a Palestinian state is premature," US State Department spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, said, adding, "We certainly support Palestinian statehood, but it can only come through a negotiated outcome, a resolution of final status issues and mutual recognitions by both parties."

Source/Video 



____



UK Parliament To Vote On Historic Palestine Motion
RT: British MPs will vote on Monday on an historic motion to symbolically recognize Palestine as an independent state. With Labour instructing its MPs to vote in favour, the non-binding motion would increase pressure on PM David Cameron over the issue.
Proposed by the chair of Labour Friends of Palestine, the back-bencher’s motion also has the support of Liberal Democrat MPs. A number of Conservative backbenchers will also lend their support, despite the party’s large pro-Israel constituency.
The motion states: “This House believes that the Government should recognize the state of Palestine alongside the State of Israel.”
The vote follows Sweden’s successful vote to recognize Palestine as a state – the first EU country to do so, despite opposition from the Israeli government.
However, even if the motion is carried, it would not commit the UK government to officially recognize Palestine – a move that is against the government’s policy.
“It’s against the government position, but it's not an attack on them as such, we just feel that now’s the time to shout out loud that this should be done,” Labour MP Grahame Morris, who is sponsoring the debate, told Reuters.
“Not only is statehood the inalienable right of the Palestinian people, but recognizing Palestine will breathe new life into a peace process that is at an impasse,” he added.
Currently Britain does not classify Palestine as a state, but claims it would support such a measure if there were an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. 

The British government has long been cautious of recognition due to its diplomatic relationship with Israel, as well as ongoing disputes over the proposed borders of an independent Palestine.
Both pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli groups have lobbied MPs in an attempt to influence Monday’s vote, with pro-Palestinian groups claiming more than 140,000 supporters have contacted their MPs urging them to vote in favor.
Meanwhile, pro-Israeli groups, including Israel Advocacy UK and the Zionist Federation, have collected around 2,000 signatures, petitioning MPs to vote against the motion.
“To grant Palestinians statehood at this premature juncture sends a harmful message that negotiations can be circumvented and dialogue ignored, rewarding intransigence over compromise,” the petition reads.
Zionist Federation chairman Alan Aziz told the Jewish Chronicle that the motion was “divisive” and “impractical”.
The debate comes in the wake of Israel’s bloody military campaign Operation Protective Edge, in which over 2,000 Gazans and 50 Israelis lost their lives, and thousands more were seriously injured.
“We continue to believe that negotiations toward a two-state solution are the best route to meeting Palestinian aspirations in reality and on the ground,” a Foreign Office spokesman said in a statement.
While Palestine is not recognized as an official member state at the United Nations and other global bodies, it was upgraded to a “non-member observer state” in 2012, despite strong Israeli, American and British opposition. 

Source

No comments:

Post a Comment