In progress at UNHQ

383rd Meeting (AM)
GA/PAL/1395

Support for Two-State Solution, Activities Marking 50 Years of Occupation Figure Prominently in Recent Steps to Ease Tensions, Palestinian Rights Committee Hears

Activities to mark 50 years of Israeli occupation and support the two-State solution had taken centre stage in recent efforts to quell tensions, especially in Jerusalem, and create conditions for mutual respect, the Palestinian Rights Committee heard today.

Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer for the State of Palestine, recalled that the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People had organized six activities in June commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Israeli occupation, from movies and discussions to a special Security Council meeting attended by the Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process and another intergovernmental event.  The Committee, along with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), had also organized the International Conference on the Question of Jerusalem from 20 to 21 July under the theme, “Jerusalem and the International Community:  Providing Political and Economic Support” in Baku, Azerbaijan.

He welcomed the adoption by the Committee and the OIC of the Baku Communiqué condemning the closure of Al-Aqsa Mosque, which had taken place during the conference, demanding the removal of obstacles against worshippers and requesting the international community to respect the historical status quo.  In Côte d’Ivoire, the Committee had added provisions to the declaration on supporting OIC efforts to stabilize the finances of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).  Palestinians had demanded the removal of obstacles to Al-Aqsa Mosque and el Haram esh-Sharif, he said, stressing:  “We do not accept any excuses for closing places of worship.”

He said Israel had removed the obstacles after 12 days of confrontation, precipitated by occupation authorities, while Palestinians peacefully prayed outside the Mosque.  The Secretary-General would visit the State of Palestine and Israel from 28 to 30 August, spending a day in Ramallah to meet with Palestinian leaders, high-tech companies and civil society groups.  On 30 August, the Secretary-General would visit Gaza, during which he hoped he would see the brutality of the occupation and the Israeli settlement programme.  He supported the Secretary-General’s position that there was no “Plan B” to the two-State solution.

Against that backdrop, Committee Chair Fodé Seck (Senegal) said it had convened a forum at United Nations Headquarters from 29 to 30 June to mark 50 years of Israeli occupation, featuring an event titled, “Ending the Occupation:  The Path to Independence, Justice, and Peace for Palestine”, and a civil society forum on “Ending the Occupation:  Creating the Space for Human Rights, Development, and a Just Peace”.

Further, from 3 to 7 July, he said the Committee had sponsored a Policy Fellow from Al-Shabaka to lecture in a course titled “Palestine, Half Century of Occupation:  A Legal, Political, and Human Approach” in Madrid  A Committee delegation had attended the forty-fourth session of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, from 10 to 11 July, while the Security Council had held its quarterly open debate on the situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, on 25 July.

Committee Rapporteur Carmelo Inguanez (Malta) added that participants at the commemorative Headquarters events in June had outlined measures for ending the occupation and realizing a two-State solution, among them, an immediate stop to Israel’s annexation of Palestinian lands, along with multilateral negotiations and partnerships with civil society.  Civil society groups from the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, Gaza and Israel, had stressed the need for accountability in efforts to reverse negative trends.  Policy recommendations on Gaza included going beyond support for emergency operations to sustained international engagement, shifting from a humanitarian to a human rights framework of analysis and action, and addressing the situation in Gaza as a political rather than a security issue.  Civil society also recommended putting into practice operational paragraph 5 of resolution 2334 (2016), which called on States to distinguish between the territory of Israel and the territories occupied since 1967.

Turning to the Baku conference, he said experts had warned that tensions between Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem had reached a breaking point.  The only solution was to end the occupation and institute a period of “divorce” in which each side respected the attachment of the other to the land and its holy sites.  Participants had called for a strong show of Islamic solidarity with Palestinians in East Jerusalem, he said, while calls also had gone out for an international meeting to mobilize foreign investment for Palestinian infrastructure in the city.

Taking the floor again, Mr. Seck described the capacity-building programme for staff of the Palestinian Government.  The Committee and the Division for Palestinian Rights had organized two activities in April:  the United Nations Capacity-Building Workshop on Sustainable Development Goals and South-South Cooperation, held in Beirut, and an online training course on climate change diplomacy.  The Division was preparing the Geneva and New York segments of the annual training courses and participants had already been competitively selected.  Preparations were also ongoing for three Palestinian civil servants to attend a training programme on United Nations Catalytic Support to South-South and Triangular Cooperation in implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.  The Division was preparing the second edition of a training course on water conflict management in Ramallah, tentatively scheduled for November 2017.

He said the Committee planned to provide financial support for three Palestinian civil servants to visit Geneva to observe the sixty-eighth session of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women in October.  More than 20 Palestinian civil servants had been trained in 2017 and another 20 would be trained during the remainder of the year.

Going forward, he said the Committee would adopt its annual report to the General Assembly in a meeting scheduled for 6 September, while the next Bureau retreat would take place in early October.  On 2 November, the Committee would host a lecture marking the 100th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, and on 28 November, the Rapporteur would attend a cultural event in Paris marking the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.  Further, the Committee had sent a letter to the Secretary-General on 18 May, stressing that his quarterly report on the implementation of Security Council resolution 2334 (2016) should be substantive, in writing and demonstrate whether parties were complying with the resolution.

Commenting on those activities, Mr. Mansour said the growing number of training programmes for Palestinians stemmed from the fact that the State of Palestine had joined all human rights treaties and conventions.  It would be useful for Palestinian cadres to participate in State party conferences related to those accords, he said.  “We want to prove that we are a responsible State and carrying our portion of the humanity agenda.”

For information media. Not an official record.