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Jerusalemites

Occupation date: 29th of October 1948. The massacre of 70 blind folded men, also three cases of rape,
 including the rape of 14 years old girl. The girl was raped while getting water for the soldiers.

The village has been mostly destroyed with the exception of few houses (some are  inhabited by Jewish settlers).  Its villagers fled to Lebanon after the Safsaf massacre in October 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Some made it to Syria: Nahr El-Bared, Burj Al-Barajneh, Badawi, Ein Al-Helweh, Sabra/Shatila, Ghoro- Ba’labak, Wihdat (Amman-Jordan), Ein Elma, Burj Al-Shamali, Tal Al-Za’atar, Yarmouk (Syria), and Homs (Syria).

The Romans referred to the village by safsofa.  Safsaf had an elementary school for boys founded during the British Mandate period. There was one mosque and the shrine of al-Ajami located in the southern borders of Safsaf. Nowadays, we can see in Safsaf an Israeli settlement named ha-Shahar and Bar Yochay. In 1596 the population was (138), in the 19th century (100), in 1931 (662) and in 1945 (910). The Arab’s land ownership was 5,344 dunums, Jewish 0 dunums, and public 2,047 dunums.

Source:palestineremembered.com

The E-1 plan and its implications for human rights in the West Bank In late November 2012, the media reported that the Israeli government had issued instructions to promote the planning of thousands of apartments that would constitute an expansion of the Ma’ale Adumim settlement as part of the E-1 plan, in the segment that connect Ma’ale Adumim to Jerusalem. 
According to themedia reports, these instructions were issued following the UN General Assembly’s recognition of Palestine as a state with UN observer status. After the directive was issued, the Civil Administration approved two of the three E-1 residential plans to be filed for objections. In August 2013, the plans had not yet been filed and no progress has been made toward their approval.

The implementation of construction plans in E1 will create an urban bloc between Ma’ale Adumim and Jerusalem, exacerbate the isolation of East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank and disrupt the territorial contiguity between the northern and southern parts of the West Bank. The establishment of settlements in occupied territory is a breach of international humanitarian law, which prohibits the transfer of people from the occupying state into the occupied area. It also prohibits any permanent changes in the occupied territory, with the exception of changes mandated by military needs or in order to benefit the local population. In addition, the establishment of Israeli settlements leads to numerous violations of Palestinians’ human rights. In addition, the Civil Administration is planning to expel the Bedouin communities currently residing in this area. If the expulsion goes through, it will be a further breach of international humanitarian law, which prohibits the forcible transfer of “protected persons”, such as these communities, other than for their own safety or for an urgent military need. Even then, it is permissible only on a temporary basis. These exceptions are not applicable in this case.

What is E1?

The E1 master plan (Plan No. 420/4) was approved in 1999. It covers approximately 1,200 hectares of land – most of which Israel declared as state land in a legally dubious procedure. During the 1990s these lands were made part of the jurisdiction of the settlement of Ma’ale Adumim, so it now encompasses approximately 4,800 hectares. The northern and southern edges of the plan largely correspond to the route planned for the Separation Barrier in the area, which would leave Ma’ale Adumim on the “Israeli” side of the barrier and separate it from neighboring areas of the West Bank. The E-1 compound is interspersed with enclaves of privately owned Palestinian land. The overall area of these enclaves is approximately 77.5 hectares. Israel was unable to declare them state land and they are not officially included in the plans. However, it is clear that the physical reality resulting from the plan will greatly limit Palestinian landowners’ access to their lands.

In addition to residential units, the plan designates areas for tourism, commerce, regional services, a regional cemetery, roads, etc. Detailed plans have already been approved for two of the plans, enabling the building permits to be issued:

  • Plan 420/4/2 designates 135 hectares in the north-west section of the E1 compound, bordering on Jerusalem’s municipal jurisdiction, for a metropolitan employment and business center serving both Ma’aleh Adumim and the Jerusalem municipality. The plan, submitted by the Ministry of Industry and Trade and prepared by the firm of Reches-Eshkol, was approved in 2002 but has yet to be implemented.
  • Plan 420/4/9 designates approximately 18 hectares for the Judea and Samaria district headquarters of the Israel Police. Approved in 2005, this plan has already been implemented, and the police headquarters has been in operation there since 2008. As part of the development of the area for the implementation of the plan, additional infrastructure was put in place, including the paving of roads, the construction of supporting walls, traffic roundabouts and street lighting, costing an estimated total of about NIS 200 million. The scale of this development is much larger than would be required simply for allowing access to the police headquarters. It appears to be part of the future development of the planned residential compound near the police headquarters.

At least three detailed plans for residential construction in the E-1 compound are being prepared, proposing 4,000 residential units and ten hotels. To date, Israeli governments have delayed any further construction in the area, partly because of strong objections on the part of the US administration and the European Union. According to media reports, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu promised the US president that he would not build in E-1. Nevertheless, in response to the UN decision to admit Palestine as an observer state, the government issued directives in late November 2012 to promote the detailed plans. Further to the government instructions, the Civil Administration approved the filing for objections of two of the three E-1 residential plans. The plans had not yet been filed in August 2013 and no progress had been made in the process of their approval.

Whom does the plan harm?

Implementation of the E1 plan will have significant repercussions for the entire population of the West Bank. Jerusalem borders on the narrowest area of the West Bank, where it spans only about 28 kilometers from east to west. Construction in E-1 will further reduce the already narrow corridor that connects the northern and southern West Bank and will impede the establishment of a Palestinian state with territorial contiguity. Israel is planning to build an alternative road that would connect between the two parts of the West Bank for use by Palestinians, but this is no more than a traffic solution.

Although all settlements are designated as closed military zones, this order is generally enforced only for their built-up areas. Implementation of the plan will result in the privately owned Palestinian lands inside E-1 becoming enclaves surrounded by built-up areas of settlements and there is concern that the landowners will not be able to access and farm these lands. The implementation of the plan will also harm the Bedouin communities in the area, whose access to grazing lands will be denied. In any case, the Civil Administration is already planning expulsion of the members of these communities. In addition, the roads currently used by Palestinians will become local roads used by settlers and Palestinians will be denied access to them. If no alternate roads are built, this access ban will significantly reduce Palestinian freedom of movement in the area.

Construction in E-1 will enclose East Jerusalem from the east and link up with the Israeli neighborhoods built north of the Old City. East Jerusalem is part of the West Bank and had once served as an urban center for West Bank residents. However, the ban Israel imposed on the entry of Palestinians into the city has artificially separated it from the rest of the West Bank. This separation will be intensified with the implementation of the E-1 plan.

Source:

http://www.btselem.org

Posted on: December 2, 2012

By Ir Amim

E1 (derived from “East 1”) is a term applied by the Ministry of Housing to an area located just east of the Jerusalem municipal boundary, on the hills between Ma’aleh Adummim and Jerusalem. 
It lies north of the Jerusalem-Ma’aleh Adummim road and edges the Palestinian towns of Anata, Abu Dis, Azariya and A-Zayim. E1, which covers some 12,000 dunams (12 sq. kilometers), is part of the planning area of Ma’aleh Adummim. The main artery between the northern and southern West Bank runs through E1.

In recent years, Israel has begun building and settling the area. The development plan for E1 includes the transfer of the West Bank (Judea & Samaria) Police Headquarters from its present location, and the construction of at least 3,500 residential units, a large commercial center, and more. Plans for the E1 area make no reference whatsoever to the local Palestinian population.

Construction in the E1 area commenced in 2004 under the direction of Housing Minister Efi Eitam. The work was illegal because no building permit had been issued. As a result of international pressure, construction was halted a short time after it began.

At the beginning of 2005, the Ma’aleh Adummim municipality approved two detailed urban plans for the development of the area, as mentioned above: one for approximately 3,500 housing units (apartment buildings and villas), and the second for the transfer of the police headquarters. The plan generated harsh criticism from the American government and the European Union. Both demanded that the plan be frozen, on the grounds that it violated Israel’s commitments according to the ‘Road Map.’ Instead, they maintained that the future of this territory be decided upon by a final status agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. Following this pressure, the Israeli government froze the project in 2004. However, building of the police headquarters was continued on the grounds that, like army bases, the police station would not be seen as creating facts on the ground, but rather as a building that could be removed.

On November 2012, following the Palestinian statehood bid, the Netanyahu government announced that it will promote a zoning plan for E1 which will allow the construction of 3000 housing units for Jews.

Here is the planned construction area for E1:

E1MapEng

As can be seen in this regional map, construction at E1 will cut the West Bank in two (the area to the east is a desert, and on a very different altitude).

mape1

Ir Amim (“City of Nations” or “City of Peoples”) is an NGO which focuses on Jerusalem within the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  Ir Amim seeks to render Jerusalem a more viable and equitable city for the Israelis and Palestinians who share it. The above text and the maps appear here with the permission of Ir Amim.

Source:

http://972mag.com

Posted on: December 2012

By Harriet Sherwood

Despite its prosaic name, E1 has the potential to kill off hopes for a viable Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, according to opponents of Israeli development on the 12 sq km site .

Israeli officials say construction on E1 is the logical and necessary expansion of Maale Adumim, a vast settlement east of the pre-1967 Green Line, to meet demand for homes close to the city that Israel claims is its indivisible capital. Plans to develop the land have been in existence for almost 14 years, but they have been kept on hold largely due to pressure from Washington.

Mostly stretching towards Jericho, E1 is home to a number of Bedouin communities and their livestock, plus a huge Israeli police headquarters perched strategically on a hill. A network of roads has been constructed, but it is closed to civilian traffic.

Implementation of the E1 development plan, approved in 1999, would largely complete a crescent of Jewish settlements around the east of Jerusalem, separating it from Palestinian towns and cities in the West Bank. It would also almost bisect the West Bank, making a contiguous Palestinian state almost impossible.

According to the Israeli human rights organisation B’tselem, implementation of the E1 plan will have “far-reaching consequences and will interrupt the contiguity of the southern and northern West Bank”.

It added: “The construction in E1 will further increase the forced isolation between the West Bank and East Jerusalem. It will enclose East Jerusalem from the east, connect to the Israeli neighbourhoods built north of Jerusalem’s Old City, and create a physical and functional barrier between East Jerusalem and the Palestinian population in adjacent West Bank communities for which the city serves as the main metropolitan and religious centre.”

The Israeli authorities have taken steps to implement a plan to forcibly relocate more than 1,000 Bedouin who live and graze their livestock on the stony hills. Demolition orders have been issued for homes, animal pens and a school built from discarded car tyres. Israel says the buildings were constructed without permission, which is almost impossible to obtain.

The original plan entailed moving the Bedouin families to a site close to Jerusalem’s main rubbish dump. Following legal challenges and international pressure, Israel has said it will consult the communities on their relocation.

Israel’s decision to press ahead with the development of E1 in the aftermath of the United Nations general assembly’s recognition of the state of Palestine signals an intention to build, rather than the start of construction, which would be many years away.

Maale Adumim is home to around 40,000 people. Resembling a small city, it has more than 20 schools and 80 kindergartens, 40 synagogues and several shopping malls. The majority of its residents are secular Jews who do not consider themselves settlers but inhabitants of a suburb of Jerusalem. Israel says Maale Adumim and other main settlement blocks close to the Green Line must be on the Israeli side of any future border.

All settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank are illegal under international law.

Source:

http://www.theguardian.com

Posted on: 

By Steven Erlanger

AL ZAYYEM, West Bank — They buried Rabi al-Essawy 14 months ago on land his family owns not far from this village, between East Jerusalem and the large Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim. Mr. Essawy, 65, was a member of an important clan, and thousands attended his funeral.


Israeli authorities have ordered the family to remove Mr. Essawy’s remains and bury him in the village cemetery, just outside E1.But Mr. Essawy’s grave is in a parcel of land known as E1, a largely empty patch of the West Bank that is among the most sensitive pieces of real estate in an intractable conflict that is fundamentally about the land. The Israelis mean to annex E1 — short for East 1 — and they do not want Muslim graves to complicate future plans to build more settlements here.

The fight over Mr. Essawy’s grave is a tiny skirmish in the long, intensifying battle over this parcel of land, a fight that speaks to the seemingly insurmountable differences, hostility and distrust between the Israelis and thePalestinians. It also stands as a symbol of the failure of negotiations as each side tries to outmaneuver the other with unilateral actions, and the international community is left on the sidelines to do little more than express discontent.

“It’s a big deal because for both sides, it looks like it’s in the heart of their dreams,” the columnist Nahum Barnea wrote in the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth. “Nobody’s innocent here. Everybody’s trying to force his will on the other side.”

Israel sees E1, only 4.6 square miles and largely rocky desert, as the stone in the arch that connects East Jerusalem, which Israel has annexed, to Maale Adumim, one of the biggest of the so-called settlement blocs, with a population of 40,000. Israel says it intends to keep Maale Adumim in any peace settlement, hoping to swap land with any future Palestinian state. In fact, it was Yitzhak Rabin of the Labor Party who in 1994 attached E1 to the municipality of Maale Adumim.

For the Palestinians, E1 is seen as essential if they are ever to achieve a viable independent state with East Jerusalem as their capital. Palestinians say they need the land to preserve a workable, practical connection between East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and to build housing for Palestinian refugees and their descendants. As important, the Palestinians contend, E1 is central to a crucial north-south route through the West Bank from Ramallah to Bethlehem.

Israeli officials argue that a system of protected roads and tunnels through E1 could allow Palestinians passage. Palestinians say that Israelis could instead use such roads to travel between Maale Adumim and Jerusalem, where many of the settlers work. Israeli officials also argue that the West Bank is not obstructed farther to the east, and that Palestinians can drive north-south closer to the Jordan River; Palestinians say that the Jordan Valley is too far out of their way and that Israel has said it will demand a security presence there in any case.

E1 has been contentious for years, with Washington warning various Israeli governments not to start building there. But E1 burst back into the forefront recently after Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, won United Nations General Assembly approval to recognize Palestine as a nonmember observer state. Mr. Abbas pressed ahead despite warnings from the United States and Israel that such an action would be a unilateral step in violation of the 1993 Oslo Accords that set up the supposedly interim Palestinian Authority.

Mr. Abbas won handily in the General Assembly on Nov. 29, in a 138 to 9 vote. Even Germany, a strong Israeli ally, abstained. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel responded with a three-part riposte. He withheld taxes collected on behalf of the Palestinians to pay down their electricity debt to Israel. He announced final approval for the construction of 3,000 more housing units in East Jerusalem and existing settlement blocs — beyond the 1967 borders, but within current settlement lines. And finally, he accelerated planning for the construction of up to 3,400 housing units inside E1.

The decision set off a critical reaction, especially in Washington and Europe. Many countries called in Israeli ambassadors to complain. But there was confusion, too, with some critics presuming that construction would go ahead in E1.

Israeli officials explained later that any construction in E1, if it happened at all, was many years away, and that the move on E1 was “symbolism against symbolism” — a symbolic response to a symbolic recognition of statehood. But the new planning for E1 is also “a warning to the Palestinians that E1 is now in play if they do further outrageous acts,” one senior official said. “We don’t exclude the possibility that E1 moves from symbolism to something real — the prime minister has raised the stakes and put E1 back on the table.”

Mr. Netanyahu himself told the German newspaper Die Welt that “as far as our future action is concerned, it depends on the Palestinians.” He added: “In any case what we’ve advanced so far is only planning, and we will have to see. We shall act further based on what the Palestinians do. If they don’t act unilaterally, then we won’t have any purpose to do so either.”

But he has also argued that there is a political consensus in Israel that E1 should be used for more Israeli settlement, that previous governments agreed with him, and that the Labor Party, under Mr. Rabin, authorized E1.

For now, the only significant Israeli construction in E1, which is largely state land, is a regional police station. Built in 2008 high on a hill, it overlooks the village cemetery where Yusra al-Qaisi, believed to be 75, was buried last week.

Khaled al-Saidi, 33, was among the mourners. He is a Bedouin whose family has lived on this land, he said, for more than 80 years; more important, and unlike most of the Bedouins here, his family bought the land in the 1990s. Still, he has been told by the Israelis to move; the house of his brother, Ali, has already been destroyed, because it was supposedly in the path of a future security zone.

“Here I’m on the edge of the security zone and there I’m also in the way of your settlement,” he said. “Where do I go? I just want a place for my sheep to go.”

On the opposite hill, near the police station, the authorities of Maale Adumim set up a Hanukkahmenorah, their efforts to light a candle defeated by the wind. But the mayor of the settlement, Benny Kashriel, said that he believes that after 18 years of delay and hesitation, the Israeli government might finally be ready to authorize construction in E1.

Source:

http://www.nytimes.com

The Economic and Social Council,

Recalling General Assembly resolutions 3210 (XXIX) of 14 October 1974, 3236 (XXIX) and 3237 (XXIX) of 22 November 1974, and Council resolution 1978 (LIX) of 31 July 1975,

1. Invites the United Nations Development Programme, the specialized agencies and other organizations within the United Nations system to intensify, as a matter of urgency and in co-ordination with the Economic Commission for Western Asia, their efforts in identifying the social and economic needs of the Palestinian people;

2. Requests these agencies and organizations to consult and co-operate with the Palestine Liberation Organization, the representative of the Palestinian people, with a view to establishing and implementing concrete projects to ensure the improvement of the social and economic conditions of the Palestinian people;

3. Urges the heads of the organizations and agencies concerned to formulate and submit to their respective governing and/or legislative bodies proposals for ensuring the implementation of the provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2 above;

4. Requests the Secretary-General to submit a report to the Council at its sixty-third session on the steps taken to implement the provisions of the present resolution.

4 August 1976

 

Source: The United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine (UNISPAL)

This resolution was published in 2010.
 
Relief Agency until 30 June 2014, Forwards Total of 27 Texts to General Assembly Recorded Votes Needed to Approve Package of Nine Drafts on Middle East Issues, Which Includes Demand for Immediate, Complete Halt to Israeli Settlement Activity
The General Assembly, gravely concerned by the critical humanitarian situation and socio-economic conditions of the Palestine refugees in the Gaza Strip, and underlining the importance of emergency assistance and urgent reconstruction efforts, would decide to extend the mandate of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) until 30 June 2014, by one of nine draft texts approved today by the Fourth Committee (Special Political and Decolonization), as it concluded the bulk of its work for the main part of the session. By a recorded vote of 163 in favour to 1 against (Israel), with 8 abstentions (Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), that text would have the Assembly affirm the necessity of UNRWA’s work and the importance of its unimpeded operation, and call upon all donors to continue to make the most generous efforts possible to meet the Agency’s anticipated needs.
 
By the first of five draft resolutions on Israeli practices, the Assembly would deplore those policies and practices of Israel that violate the human rights of the Palestinian people and other Arabs of the occupied territories, and demand that Israel cooperate with the Special Committee in implementing its mandate.  The Assembly would condemn and call for the immediate cessation of all illegal Israeli settlement activities and the construction of the wall, as well as the excessive and indiscriminate use of force against the civilian population, the destruction and confiscation of properties, measures of collective punishment, and the detention and imprisonment of thousands of civilians. Broad support eluded the text, which was approved by a recorded vote of 87 in favour to 8 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 73 abstentions. Four other drafts on Israeli practices — on the applicability of the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Israeli settlements, Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the occupied Syrian Golan — were also approved by recorded votes.
 
By the draft on the applicability of the Geneva Convention, the Assembly would demand that Israel accept the de jure applicability of the Convention in the occupied Arab territories and comply scrupulously with that Convention’s provisions.  It was approved by a vote of 156 in favour to 9 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Panama, United States), with 4 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia). The Assembly would reiterate its demand for the immediate and complete cessation of all Israeli settlement activity, and demand that Israel comply with its legal obligations as set by the International Court of Justice, according to the draft on Israeli settlements.  It was approved by a vote of 159 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 5 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Panama). Calling on Israel to cease its imposition of prolonged closures and economic and movement restrictions, including those amounting to a blockade on the Gaza Strip, the Assembly would also urge Member States to continue to provide emergency assistance to the Palestinian people to alleviate the financial crisis and dire socio-economic and humanitarian situations they faced, particularly in the Gaza Strip. 
 
That draft was approved by a vote of 156 in favour to 9 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Panama, United States), with 4 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia). By a draft on the occupied Syrian Golan, the Assembly would call on Israel to desist from changing the physical character, demographic composition, institutional structure and legal status of the occupied Syrian Golan and, in particular, to desist from the establishment of settlements.  That text was approved by a recorded vote of 158 in favour to 1 against ( Israel), with 10 abstentions ( Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Fiji, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States). According to one of the four draft resolutions on UNRWA, also approved by recorded votes, the Assembly would reaffirm the right of all persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities to return to their homes or former places of residence in the territories occupied by Israel since 1967.
 
That draft, by which the Assembly would also strongly appeal to all Governments, organizations and individuals to contribute generously to the Agency, was approved by a vote of 160 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 5 abstentions (Cameroon, Canada, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Fiji, Liberia). By a vote of 162 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 2 abstentions (Cameroon, Canada), the Assembly would urge all States, specialized agencies and non-governmental organizations to increase their contributions to the Agency in order to address the serious financial constraints and underfunding, especially with respect to the Agency’s regular budget deficit, noting that financial shortfalls have been exacerbated by the current humanitarian situation on the ground. A draft on Palestine refugees’ properties and revenues was approved by a vote of 160 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 4 abstentions (Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia). Making general statement on the package of resolutions were the representatives of Belgium on behalf of the European Union, Bolivia, Canada, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon. Speaking in explanation of vote were the representatives of Australia, Iran, Syria, Panama, and Georgia. The representative of Indonesia introduced the four draft resolutions contained in UNRWA’s report.  The representative of Cuba introduced the five draft resolutions on Israeli practices. The representative of the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine also spoke. Committee Chairman Chitsaka Chipaziwa ( Zimbabwe) delivered concluding remarks.
 
Background The Committee met this morning to take action on all pending drafts before it, including four draft resolutions relating to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), and five draft resolutions on the report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories. By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.8, on assistance to Palestine refugees, the Committee would have the Assembly affirm the need to continue the Agency’s work, as well as the importance of its unimpeded operation, pending the resolution of the question of the Palestine refugees.  It would have the Assembly call on all donors to continue to make the most generous efforts possible to meet the Agency’s anticipated needs, including with increased expenditures arising from the continuing deterioration of the socio-economic and humanitarian situation in the region.
 
By the terms of draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.9, on persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities, the Committee would have the Assembly reaffirm the right of all persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities to return to their homes or former places of residence in the territories occupied by Israel since 1967.  It would endorse the efforts of the Commissioner-General of UNRWA to provide humanitarian assistance on an emergency basis, and as a temporary measure to persons in the area who are currently displaced and in serious need of continued assistance.  Further, it would have the Assembly strongly appeal to all Governments, organizations and individuals to contribute generously to the Agency, and to other intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations concerned.
 
By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.10, on operations of UNRWA, the Committee would have the Assembly reaffirm that the Agency’s functioning remains essential in all fields of operation and ask the Secretary-General to support the Agency’s institutional strengthening through the provision of sufficient resources from the United Nations regular budget. By further provisions, it would have the Assembly urge the Government of Israel to expeditiously reimburse the Agency for all transit charges incurred and other financial losses sustained as a result of delays and restrictions on movement and access imposed by Israel. 
 
It would call upon Israel particularly to cease obstructing the movement and access of the staff, vehicles and supplies of the Agency, and to fully lift the restrictions impeding the import of necessary construction materials and supplies for the reconstruction and repair of damaged or destroyed Agency facilities. By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.11 on Palestine refugees’ properties and their revenues, the Committee would have the Assembly reaffirm that the Palestine refugees were entitled to their property and to the income derived there from.  It would also request the Secretary-General to take all appropriate steps, in consultation with the United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine, for the protection of Arab property, assets and property rights in Israel.  It would also urge the Palestinian and Israeli sides, as agreed between them, to deal with the important issue of Palestine refugees’ properties and revenues within the framework of the final status negotiations of the Middle East peace process. The Committee was also set to take action on five draft resolutions contained in the report on the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories.
 
By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.12 entitled Work of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories, the Committee would have the Assembly reiterate its demand that Israel cooperate with the Special Committee in implementing its mandate, and deplore those policies and practices of Israel that violate the human rights of the Palestinian people and other Arabs of the occupied territories.  It would request the Special Committee to continue to investigate Israeli policies and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and other Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967, especially violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention.  It would also have the Special Committee consult with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), as appropriate. By the terms of draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.13 on the Applicability of the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949, to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the other occupied Arab territories, the Committee would have the Assembly demand that Israel accept the de jure applicability of the Convention in the occupied Arab territories and that it comply scrupulously with that Convention’s provisions.
 
By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.14 on Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the occupied Syrian Golan, the Committee would have the Assembly call on Israel to comply strictly with its obligations under international law, with respect to the alteration of the character and status of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.  It would reiterate its demand for the immediate and complete cessation of all Israeli settlement activity, and demand that Israel comply with its legal obligations as set by the International Court of Justice.  Further, it would reiterate its call for the prevention of all acts of violence and harassment by Israeli settlers, especially against Palestinian civilians and their properties and agricultural lands. By draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.15 on Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, the Committee would have the Assembly condemn all acts of violence, especially the excessive use of force by the Israeli occupying forces against Palestinian civilians. 
 
The Assembly would call upon Israel, the occupying Power, to cease its imposition of prolonged closures and economic and movement restrictions, including those amounting to a blockade on the Gaza Strip, and, in this regard, to fully implement the Agreement on Movement and Access and the Agreed Principles for the Rafah Crossing, both of 15 November 2005.  It would urge Member States to continue to provide emergency assistance to the Palestinian people to alleviate the financial crisis and dire socio-economic and humanitarian situations they faced, particularly in the Gaza Strip.  It would reiterate its demand for the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1860 (2009). Also by the text, the Assembly would call upon Israel, the occupying Power, to comply strictly with its obligations under international law, including international humanitarian law, with respect to the alteration of the character, status and demographic composition of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.  At the same time, it would express grave concern at the firing of rockets against Israeli civilian areas resulting in loss of life and injury. According to draft resolution A/C.4/65/L.16 on the occupied Syrian Golan, the Committee would have the Assembly call upon Israel to comply with the relevant resolutions on the occupied Syrian Golan, in particular Security Council resolution 497 (1981). 
 
It would also call on Israel to desist from changing the physical character, demographic composition, institutional structure and legal status of the occupied Syrian Golan and, in particular, to desist from the establishment of settlements.  Israel would further be called on to desist from imposing Israeli citizenship and Israeli identity cards on the Syrian citizens in the occupied Syrian Golan and from its repressive measures against the population of the occupied Syrian Golan.  It would call on Member States to not recognize any of the legislative or administrative measures and actions referred to above.
 
Introduction of Draft Resolutions
 
HASAN KLEIB ( Indonesia) introduced four draft resolutions under agenda item 51:  United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).  The draft resolutions, he said, reaffirmed fundamental long-standing principles of the international community vis-à-vis the Palestinian refugees.  For more than 62 years, the refugees had suffered from having been uprooted from their homeland, and UNRWA had provided essential care. He said the drafts reaffirmed the rights of the Palestinian refugees to just compensation and return to their properties and to a dignified life, and the commitment to achieving a just solution to the Palestinian refugee problem on the basis of General Assembly resolution 194 (1948), an integral component of a just lasting solution.  The resolutions also firmly conveyed the international community’s commitment to alleviating the Palestinian plight, and they acknowledged the vital role of UNRWA in providing education, health, relief and social services and emergency assistance. 
 
They also reaffirmed support for the Agency’s mandate and its efforts in all fields of operation. While based on the resolutions adopted during previous sessions, the drafts had been updated to reflect the situation on the ground, including the hardships faced by the Palestinian refugees and the impediments to UNRWA operations, he noted.  In that regard, while the resolutions could not fully convey the extent of the suffering of the refugees, he was certain they reflected the main issues accurately.  The draft resolution, L.8, on assistance to Palestinian refugees, reaffirmed the core principles regarding the Palestinian refugees and UNRWA, recalled resolution 194 (III) (1948) and resolution 302 (IV) (1949) and stressed the imperative of resolving the Palestinian refugee problem in the interest of lasting peace.  The operative paragraphs affirmed the need to continue UNRWA, pending the achievement of a just solution, and called upon donors to be as generous as possible.  The text would have the Assembly renew the Agency’s mandate until June 2014 and invite Kuwait to become a member of the Advisory Commission.
 
The Assembly would decide to extend the mandate of the Agency until 30 June 2014, without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 11 of the General Assembly resolution 194 (III). He said that the second draft, L.9, on persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities, reaffirmed the right of persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities to return to their homes in the territories occupied by Israel and stressed the need for an accelerated return of the displaced persons, in compliance with the mechanism agreed upon by the parties.  The third draft resolution, on UNRWA’s operations (document A/C.4/62/L.10), addressed the main aspects of the Agency’s operations and the difficulties it had faced during the reporting period.  Those had included financial shortfalls, the classroom shortage in Gaza, and the ongoing imposition of restrictions on necessary materials.
 
The draft addressed the continuing needs of the refugees in all fields, he said.  Due attention was given to the hardships and difficult socio-economic conditions that confronted the refugees in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, particularly in the Gaza Strip, as a result of the prolonged Israeli blockade.  The draft reaffirmed that the functioning of the Agency remained essential in all fields of operation and expressed appreciation to the Commissioner-General and staff of the Agency for their tireless efforts. He then presented an oral amendment to operative 10 regarding the report of the Secretary-General on the strengthening of the management capacity of UNRWA.  As the report was not finalized, that paragraph should be amended to read:  “Looks forward to the transmittal of the report of the Secretary-General on the strengthening of the management capacity of the Agency, as requested by the Working Group and as endorsed by the General Assembly in its resolution 64/89”.
 
The last draft, L.11, on Palestinian refugees’ properties and their revenues, recalled resolutions 194 (III) and subsequent resolutions on the question, and also recalling the principle that no one should be arbitrarily deprived of his or her property, the draft reaffirmed the Palestine Arab refugees were entitled to their property and income derived from it.  The Secretary-General was requested to take all appropriate steps for the protection of Arab property.  He expressed strong hope the draft resolutions would once again receive the overwhelming support they deserved, reflecting the abiding support for the important humanitarian work of UNRWA.
 
REBECA HERNÁNDEZ TOLEDANO ( Cuba) said it was an honour to present the five resolutions under consideration under the theme The Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories. The Special Committee, she recalled, had reported that the human rights situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Syrian Golan heights and East Jerusalem continued unabated and had resulted in continued violations of human rights and international law.  Specifically, there was great concern owing to the blockade, which led to other violations of all other human rights of the Palestinian people.  The landscape of the other areas, such as East Jerusalem, required attention, especially due to settlement activity.  That situation increased tensions and undermined a two-State solution, and thus, was the main obstacle to restarting the peace process. 
 
The draft resolutions pointed to a need to cease those practices in the Occupied Territory, and required compliance with relevant instruments to end the systematic violations of the Geneva Convention. She said that the first text, on the Work of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli practices (document A/C.4/65/L.12), mentioned pertinent resolutions of the General Assembly, the Security Council and the Human Rights Council.  It emphasized the need to end the Israeli occupation, which had begun in 1967, and it called for the continued investigation into human rights violations.  The second draft, regarding the Applicability of the Geneva Convention (documentA/C.4/65/L.13), showed the applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem and other Arab territories occupied since 1967, and called for Israel to respect the Convention. The third draft resolution, she noted, on Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem and the occupied Syrian Golan (document A/C.4/65/L.14), referenced resolutions of the General Assembly and Security Council regarding illegal activities by Israel in the Palestinian Occupied Territory and Syrian Golan. 
 
It recognized the damages stemming from policies, including settlement activities, and expressed specific concern over settlement activity, including East Jerusalem, and the illegal construction of the separation wall. The draft reiterated the Assembly’s request for the immediate cessation of all Israeli settlement activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan, and called in that regard for the full implementation of the relevant Security Council resolutions.  Among other things, the text called for the prevention of provocation by Israeli colonialists against Palestinian civilians. Introducing the draft resolution on Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem (document A/C.4/65/L.15), she said that text was focused on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and reaffirmed the applicability to the Occupied Palestinian Territory. 
 
It also referred to resolutions of the Security Council, General Assembly, and Human Rights council.  She said the Israeli practices of collective punishment, detention and destruction had been carefully examined.  The resolution expressed great concern over safety in Gaza, and the trauma and destruction of military operations between 2008 and 2009, as well as the serious violations of international humanitarian law.  It urged Israel to stop its blockade and to allow accelerated reconstruction of Gaza. The last draft resolution, on the occupied Syrian Golan (document A/C.4/65/L.16), exhorted Israel to comply with the relevant resolutions and to desist from changing the physical character, demographic composition, institutional structure and legal status of the occupied Syrian Golan and in particular to desist from the establishment of settlements.  The draft resolution determined that all measures taken by Israel in order to change the legal nature or character were null and void.  The text enjoyed broad support from almost all Member States, she said, adding that, on the co-sponsors’ behalf, there was deep- seated hope that all Member States would endorse all resolutions that represented serious issues for the Palestinians and other Arab inhabitants of the occupied territories.
 
Action on Drafts
 
Following the introduction of the drafts, the Committee proceeded to take action on the four draft resolutions contained in UNRWA’s report, and the five draft resolutions contained in the report on Israeli practices. In a general statement before the vote, the representative of Belgium, speaking on behalf of the European Union, said the Union believed the resolutions addressed a broad range of issues and important principles, and she encouraged further steps to streamline the resolutions relating to Palestine.  The Union deemed it “indispensable” that both parties were calm and refrained from actions and rhetoric that would negatively affect the peace process, as it was necessary to create an environment conducive to a successful outcome. The Committee then proceeded to take recorded votes on the four draft resolutions relating to UNRWA.
 
First, the draft text on assistance to Palestine refugees, L.8, was approved by a recorded vote of 163 in favour to 1 against (Israel), with 8 abstentions (Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States). Next, the text on persons displaced as a result of the June 1967 and subsequent hostilities, L.9, was approved by a vote of 160 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 5 abstentions (Cameroon, Canada, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Fiji, Liberia).
 
Then, the draft resolution on UNRWA’s operations, L.10, was approved by a recorded vote of 162 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 2 abstentions (Cameroon, Canada). The text on Palestine refugees’ properties and revenues, L.11, was approved by a vote of 160 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 4 abstentions (Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia). Speaking after the vote, the representative of Australia said his delegation had voted in favour of L.10 as it had done previously, because Australia strongly supported the work of UNRWA in providing humanitarian assistance to Palestinian refugees in the Middle East. 
 
He welcomed the changes this year to the language of the resolution, but said his delegation would appreciate more on that front as it could be more balanced, such as with regard to the condemnation of Hamas’ actions that deliberately endangered lives.  He said Australia strongly supported Israel’s right to self-defence, and reiterated support for the Agency and its staff to address the plight of the Palestinian refugees. The Committee then proceeded to take action on the five draft resolutions relating to the report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories. Making a general statement before the vote, the representative of Bolivia said that the delegation would like to be included in the list of co-sponsors of L.16 on the occupied Syrian Golan. Next, the draft text on the work of the Special Committee to investigate Israeli practices, L.12, was approved by a recorded vote of 87 in favour to 8 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 73 abstentions.
 
The draft text on the applicability of the Geneva Convention relative to the protection of civilian persons in time of war, of 12 August 1949, to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the other occupied Arab territories, L.13, was approved by a vote of 161 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 3 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo). The draft text on Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the occupied Syrian Golan, L.14, was approved by a vote of 159 in favour to 6 against (Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States), with 5 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Panama). Then, the draft resolution on Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, L.15, was approved by a vote of 156 in favour to 9 against (Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Panama, United States), with 4 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia).
 
The Committee then turned to the draft resolution on the occupied Syrian Golan, L.16, approving it by a recorded vote of 158 in favour to 1 against (Israel), with 10 abstentions (Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Fiji, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, United States). Speaking in explanation of vote after the votes, the representative of Iran said his delegation had voted in favour of all draft resolutions relating to the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices, in order to join other members of the Committee in showing sympathy and solidarity with the Palestinian people.  He reiterated that his delegation would maintain its long-lasting position on the resolutions relating to the Palestinian issue.  To the knowledge of all, Iran had been unwavering in its support for the Palestinian people’s endeavours to attain their national goals, including full access to the right to self-determination.  Iran continued to emphasize the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, who had suffered from occupation and suppression for decades. 
 
He believed that the settlement of the Palestinian crisis was achievable only if the inalienable rights of the people of Palestine were recognized, supported and maintained.  However, that issue had remained unsolved for more than six decades.  A durable peace in Palestine was possible through justice and an end to discrimination and occupation, the return of all Palestinian refugees to their homeland, and the establishment of a State, with al-Quds al-Sharif as its capital. Also speaking in explanation of vote after the votes, the representative of Syria said his delegation had voted in favour of resolutions L.12 and L.15, proceeding from Syria’s belief in the justice of the cause of the Palestinian people and their legitimate struggle to be liberated from Israeli occupation and establish an independent State.  Implementation of that goal was directly linked to compelling Israel to put an end to systematically violating the human rights of the Palestinian people, including violations through excessive use of force, collective punishment, and confiscation of land.  He said those two resolutions included certain paragraphs that were inconsistent and did not fulfil certain aspirations.  In particular, he wished to place on record a rejection of the suggestion in the ninth preambular paragraph of L.12 and preambular paragraph 20 of L.15, since those two paragraphs gave the impression of equality between the aggressor and the victim of aggression.  That would convey an erroneous political message to the Israeli occupation authorities, he said. He stressed that the fact that Israel occupied the Palestinian territory and not the other way around “was known to all”. 
 
Israel had launched aggression against Gaza using internationally prohibited weapons to kill women, children, and the elderly, and not the other way around.  Israel, the occupying Power, legitimized blind and unjust occupation of the Palestinian Territory, despite total international rejection of that irresponsible provocative policy.  The distortion of facts was a denial of the rights under occupation — the rights to resist the occupier.  Syria would never accept a transformation of that injustice into justice, or that murder triumph over justice and law.  Rather, Syria would continue to reject any approach that equated the occupier and those struggling to end an occupation, because that approach was erroneous and contravened the provisions of the United Nations Charter. The representative of Panama said the delegation had intended to vote against L.12, and would like the Committee to take note of that.
 
General Statements after Vote
 
FEDA ABDELHADY-NASSER, Representative of the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations, said her delegation wished to express its gratitude to all States that had voted in favour of the resolutions approved today.  She expressed deep appreciation for the support of the resolutions and of the “principles and just positions” enshrined therein.  She further appreciated the valuable support of the delegations of Indonesia and Cuba for introducing the drafts on behalf of the co-sponsors, as well as for the constructive manner in which the negotiations had been conducted by the European Union and its members. It was a most critical junction on the long road to freedom for the Palestinians and for peace in the Middle East, she said.  At the present critical time, upholding the rules and principles of international law and adherence to United Nations resolutions were of paramount importance, including through a commitment to a just solution to ease the agony of the Palestinian refugees, in accordance with General Assembly resolution 194 (1948), as well as strong support for UNRWA’s mandate. 
 
Today, there had been clear reaffirmation of the commitment of ensuring respect for the human rights of the Palestinian people, which must be upheld under foreign occupation.  The international community was clear in its calls for the cessation of Israeli aggressions in the occupied territories and for respect by Israel of its legal obligations, including under the Fourth Geneva Convention.  The international community must not waver in those demands, and Israel’s positions and actions must be changed. 
 
The occupying Power must heed those demands and allow efforts for a peace settlement to move forward, in order to bring about real change and create the right environment to bring about a final, just and lasting settlement, bringing peaceful coexistence to the Palestinian and Israeli peoples, and to the Middle East region as a whole. CONRAD SHECK ( Canada) said his delegation wished, once again, to point to the disproportionate focus placed on the situation in the Middle East in the Committee, which singled out an individual party as being at fault.  That general practice continued, despite the welcome introduction in some instances of more “balanced language”.  Canada believed the resolutions and the debate on the Arab-Israeli issue in the United Nations General Assembly should be fair-minded, and above all, seek to contribute constructively to the goal of a negotiated two-State solution to the conflict.  Long-standing positions had not changed, he said.  Israel was bound by the Fourth Geneva Convention, and Canada maintained that Israeli settlements were a violation of that Convention.  It had voted in favour of some of the resolutions, however, Canada continued to have concerns with some of the language, which his delegation believed was divisive, at a time when the parties should be brought back to negotiations. He urged all parties to the conflict to respect their obligations under international humanitarian law, including protecting civilians.  Canada demonstrated continuing commitment to the Palestinian refugees, and had supported UNRWA operations since 1950. 
 
The work of UNRWA was vital in meeting humanitarian needs in the region, however his delegation believed that some of the language in the resolutions did not serve to promote a peaceful solution, but focused blame solely on Israel without recognizing Israel’s legitimate security concerns, or that the cause of the December 2008 conflict had been the rockets fired by Hamas.  One-sided language did not belong in a resolution supporting the good work of UNRWA.  Canada would continue to support the Committee in its efforts to help the people of Palestine, the only way to secure a peaceful future for the Middle East. BASHAR JA’AFARI ( Syria) thanked the delegations of Indonesia and Cuba for presenting the draft resolutions, and said the wide support had once again confirmed the international community’s rejection of the occupation of the territory by force and the disregard of the rights of a people. 
 
The international community sent an unambiguous message to Israel, requesting it to end its occupation of all Arab occupied territories and to cease its violations of the Geneva Convention of 1949.  Attempts by Israel, the occupying Power, to annex the occupied Syrian Golan and impose legal and administrative jurisdiction over it, and the expansion of settlement of those lands, as well as the apartheid practised against the citizens of the Golan, were null and void and had no legal effect in the view of the international community.  That confirmed Security Council resolution 479 (1981), which had been adopted unanimously. 
 
The violation by Israel of international law was dangerous, and there was no legal basis for occupying the Syrian Golan.  But in a provocative manner, Israel had annexed the Syrian Golan. He said that that provocative act was a reminder of what had happened at the beginning of the Second World War in Europe, when one aggressive country attacked another and annexed parts of its territory.  By adopting the draft resolutions today, the Committee had confirmed the importance of the Special Committee on Israeli Practices, and called on all States to provide the necessary assistance to the Committee.  The Special Committee represented the “eye” that revealed Israel’s crimes to the international community.  Any attempt to attack or weaken that Committee would only give Israel a cover to continue its settlement practices and violations of human rights and international humanitarian law.  Syria always expressed its commitment to a comprehensive and just peace and accepted the Arab Peace Initiative. 
 
Syria extended its hand to peace, but Israel had disregarded it and continued its occupying practices in the occupied Arab territories. Turning to the ongoing detention of 11,000 persons in the prisons of the occupying Power, he said those included hundreds who had been legally elected by the Palestinian people.  The continued blockade against Gaza, despite all appeals by the international community to end it, persisted.  All of those violations were documented in the Goldstone Report.  The world was witnessing unabated settlement activities in the West Bank, including occupied East Jerusalem.  The peace process could not be achieved by one party supporting peace, with the support of the international community, while another party tried its best to undermine the peace at all times. 
 
What was lacking in the peace process was an Israeli partner ready to achieve the peace process known to the international community. He said his delegation was disheartened that some delegations had refrained from voting on some of the resolutions, and he called on them to join the international community by supporting those resolutions when they were submitted to the General Assembly in the coming days.  Any hesitation in condemning the Israeli occupation and annexations would send the wrong message to those “outlaws”, the Israelis, indicating that the rule of the jungle could replace international law and that those outlaws could go unpunished.  Only Israel had voted against all the resolutions, which showed that it challenged international humanitarian law.
 
AMIR WEISSBROD ( Israel) said his delegation had already expressed its position and did not want to repeat itself.  However, in relation to what the Permanent Representative of Syria had said, he said that to hear lectures from a country that was delivering arms to terrorist organizations in Lebanon and the Gaza strip — such countries should look at themselves first instead of giving lectures, as its actions did not show any will for peace. Mr. JA’AFARI ( Syria) said there was no other terrorism on the surface of the planet like the terrorism committed by Israel.  He said that entity had been established on the basis of terrorism, and its terrorism — which had carried the names of gangs, terrorist gangs like Stern and Haganah — was then led by the heads of the Government of Israel, at a later stage. 
 
Those gangs committed aggression collectively against the Palestinian people in the 1940s and 1950s, and killed hundreds in collective massacres in regions of Palestine.  The hands of the Israeli State terrorism extended to other Arab countries as well.  That terrorism, committed collectively through massacres in Lebanon, Jordan and Egypt, had even reached Tunisia, the Sudan, and other regions of the world.  That entity had no right to speak about law before its leaders and governors knew the meaning of law.  Those were outlaws, and that was how they were treated by the international community, and the voting by majority against Israel today was just such a clear-cut example. He said that the Israeli Government did not understand that their occupation of another’s territory was rejected by international law, and the Geneva Convention of 1949 was “a documented thing”.  That was reflected by tens of reports prepared by United Nations experts, such as the Goldstone Report, making Israeli violations known to all, and embarrassing those closest to Israel. 
 
Israel had introduced nuclear weapons into the region and threatened to use them.  It was Israel that “blackmailed its closest ally, the United States”, in order to get the most concessions, to freeze settlements for several months only.  That was a “big lie” because the settlements had never stopped, but rather had reached more advanced and dangerous dimensions, and that was before talking about the peace process.  The leaders of Israel had not a single partner who believed in peace. They were people who called for war, “war lovers”, teachers of provocation; they oppressed others, they sent messages of apartheid and racism, he said.  In the twenty-first century, they had asked for the establishment of a Jewish State that they said was an “oasis of peace in the Middle East”. 
 
He asked what could be done regarding the hundreds of settlements in the occupied territories and he asked “isn’t this terrorism?”  He called on the representative of Israel to “keep silent” and to be ashamed of the policies of his countries and to expose them as they were. Mr. WEISSBROD ( Israel) said he did not wish to prolong the discussion, but remarked that the statement of the Syrian representative spoke for itself.  Instead of supporting terror and giving weapons to Hamas and Hizbullah, they should show that they wanted peace.  In that regard, the burden was on them. Mr. JA’AFARI ( Syria) said he felt forced to teach the representative of Israel a lesson in history, because the Palestinian people in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip were struggling against a foreign occupier and they could not be in any way terrorists, as they were struggling against Israeli State terrorism.  Lebanese resistance was not terrorism, because it stood against Israeli occupation of Lebanese territories, and because Israel had committed aggression more than 10 times over the past 30 years.  The Israeli State terrorism was the one that had to be questioned.  The Palestinians were defending themselves against an occupier that had shown disregard for human dignity for decades.  That was why there were tens of resolutions supported by the international community, and nobody could find one single draft resolution that supported the Israeli occupation. He said that peace needed to be based on complete withdrawal of the complete occupied territory since 1967.  Israel was fully exposed, vertically and horizontally, and there was no way that its “lies” should be accepted by anybody.  There was “only one terrorism” in the Middle East, and it was the Israeli State terrorism. MAJDI RAMADAN ( Lebanon) said the result of the voting today was the best answer to what the Israeli delegate had said; it was clear where the real international community stood, which was on the side of the rule of law, and not the “other international community”, the smaller one, that protected the outlaw State of Israel.  The results in the Committee today represented the real international community and the real international opinion.  That international community condemned Israel for all its illegal practices, whether in Palestine, the Syrian Golan, and elsewhere. Regarding the Israeli delegate’s mention of Hizbullah, he said he wished to remind Israel that Hizbullah was a member of the unity Government in Lebanon and was a popular response to the occupation by Israel of parts of Lebanon.  It was only a resistance movement that had the honour to resist the occupation and liberate most parts of its land. He said he heard the Israeli delegate also raise the issue of terrorism, and again recalled that two Israeli senior officials, one of whom was a founding member of the State of Israel, were subjected to an arrest warrant issued by “one of the countries in the room”.  He advised the Israeli delegates to be careful when raising such accusations. The representative of Georgia said that delegation had been absent during the voting procedures, and expressed support for draft resolutions L.8, L.9, L.10, L.11, L.13, L.14, L.15 and L.16.  That delegation would have abstained from L.12.
 
Closing Remarks of the Chairman
 
Chitsaka Chipaziwa of Zimbabwe said that today was the conclusion of agenda items to the Special Political and Decolonization Committee for the main part of the sixty-fifth session.  There were a few pending issues that would be dealt with in 2011:  the report on the strengthening of the management capacity of UNRWA; the report of the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations; and election of the Fourth Committee’s Bureau for the sixty-sixth session of the General Assembly. He said that during the session, the Committee had approved 25 draft resolutions and two draft decisions.  It held 24 formal meetings during which, a wide variety of agenda items included a wide variety of topics.  The work of the Fourth Committee was mainly political and, as agreed by the members, that character should be retained and strengthened. 
 
The Committee also covered some other important issues that related to many other aspects of the work of the Secretariat such as public information, outer space and atomic radiation.  The agenda items allocated to the Committee provided opportunities to consider issues in an in-depth manner. Regarding decolonization, he said that the Committee approved 12 draft resolutions and one draft decision on consideration of the political, economic and social conditions of the Non-Self-Governing Territories.  The draft resolution on the item on international cooperation in the peaceful uses of outer spaces was approved without a vote, and wide-ranging recommendations emerged on matters related to Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space. 
 
The working group established under that item played an important role in paving the way for the Committee to approve the draft resolution without a vote, and he expressed appreciation to the Romania delegation in guiding the work of the working group. In that connection, the presentations presented to the Committee were very informative.  He highlighted the presentation on “Space and emergencies”, which provided information on how space technology can be used in disaster reduction. On questions relating to information, the Committee had heard about progress made in providing new services and new media, and, acting on the recommendation of the Committee on Information had approved two draft resolutions, he noted.  Under the item “effects of atomic radiation” the Committee had heard a presentation by the Chair of the Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation and had held a general debate. 
 
Subsequently, the Committee had approved the related draft resolution without a vote, by which it asked the Assembly to again invite six Member States to attend the fifty-eighth session of the Scientific Committee as observers. On the “Comprehensive review of the whole question of peacekeeping operation in all their aspects”, as in previous sessions, he said there had been very useful and informative interactive dialogue.  May issues raised during the interactive dialogue and general debate would be considered in greater detail during the 2011 session of the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations. Turning to the agenda items dealing with UNRWA and the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices, he noted that a total of nine draft resolutions had been recommended for adoption by the General Assembly on various aspects of those important matters. 
 
Under the item “Revitalization of the work of the General Assembly”, the Committee tentatively approved the draft programme of work for its next session in 2011. He expressed appreciation to all delegations for cooperation and assistance, and said he was indebted for the flexibility.  He paid tribute to Vice-Chairpersons:  David Windsor of Australia; Marcela Zamora of Costa Rica; and Radoslaw Flisiuk of Poland.  He thanked the Committee’s Rapporteur, Mohammad Wali Naeemi of Afghanistan.  He also paid tribute to Under Secretary-General for General Assembly and Conference Management, Shaaban M. Shaaba, for his support and that of his Department.  In addition, he thanked press officers, interpreters, editors, translators, verbatim teams, conference and document officers, sound technicians and others who laboured so hard.  Last but not least, he thanked the Fourth Committee Secretariat Chair.
 
Source: United Nations

The Security Council

Grieved at the extensive damage caused by arson to the Holy Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on 21 August 1969 under the military occupation of Israel.

Midful of the consequent loss to human culture, Having heard the statements made before the Council reflecting the universal outrage caused by the act of sacrilege in one of the most venerated shrines of mankind, Recalling its resolutions 252 (1968) of 21 May 1968 and 267 (1969) of 3 July 1969 and the earlier General Assembly resolutions 2253 (ES-V0 and 2254 (ES-V0 of 4 and 14 July 1967, respectively, concerning measures and actions by Israel affecting the status of the City of Jerusalem.

Reaffirming the established principle that acquisition of territory by military conquest is inadmissible, Reaffirms its resolution 252 (1968) and 267 (1969); Recognizes that any act of destruction or profanation of the Holy Places, religious buildings and sites in Jerusalem or any encouragement of, or connivance at, any such act may seriously endanger international peace and security.

Determines that the execrable act of desecration and profanation of the Holy Al Aqsa Mosque emphasizes the immediate necessity of Israel’s desisting from acting in violation of the aforesaid resolutions and rescinding forthwith all measures and actions taken by it designed to alert the status of Jerusalem;

Calls upon Israel scrupulously to observe the provisions of the Geneva Convention and international law governing military occupation to refrain from causing any hindrance to the discharge of the established functions of the Supreme Moslem Council of Jerusalem, including any co-operation that Council may desire from countries with predominantly Moslem population and from countries with predominantly Moslem population and from Moslem communities in relation to its plan for the maintenance and repair of the Islamic Holy Places in Jerusalem:

Condemns the failure of Israel to comply with the aforementioned resolutions and calls upon it to the implement forthwith the provisions of these resolutions;

Reiterates the determination in paragraph 7 of resolution 267 (1969) that, in the event of a negative response or no response, the Security Council shall convene without delay to consider what further action should be taken in this matter.

Requests the Secretary-General to follow closely the implementation of the present resolution and to report thereon to the Security Council at the earliest possible date.

Adopted at the 1512th meeting by 11 votes to none, with 4 abstentions (Colombia, Finland, Paraguay, United States of America.)

Demanding that Israel desist immediately from all excavations and transformations of the historical, cultural and religious sites of Jerusalem, particularly beneath and around the Moslem holy sanctuary of Al-Haram Al-Sharif (Al-Masjid Al-Aqsa and the sacred dome of the Rock), the structures of which are in danger of collapse.

The General Assembly,

Reaffirming that the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949, is applicable to Palestinian and other Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967, including Jerusalem.

Recalling its resolutions 2253 (ES-V) of 4 July 1967, 2254 (ES-V) of 14 July 1967, 3092 (XXVIII) of 7 December 1973,3240 B (XXIX) of 29 November 1974, 3525 B (XXX) of 15 December 1975, 31/106 B of 16 December 1976, 32/91 A of 13 December 1977, 33/113 A of 18 December 1978, 34/90 B of 12 December 1979 and 35 / 122 of 11 December 1980, Recalling Security Council resolutions 252 (1968) of 27 May 1968, 267 (1969) of 3 July 1969, 271 (1969) of 15 September 1969. 465 (1980) of 1 March 1980, 476 (1980) of 30 June 1980 and 478 (1980) of 20 August 1980.

Bearing in mind the need to protect and preserve the unique spiritual and religious character and dimensions of the Holy City of Jerusalem.

Expressing its very grave concern that Israel, as the occupying Power, persists in excavating and transforming the historical, cultural and religious sites of Jerusalem.

Noting with alarm that the excavations and transformations in progress seriously endanger the historical, cultural and religious sites of Jerusalem as well as its over-all configuration and that these sites have never been as endangered as they are today.

Noting with satisfaction and approval the decision of the World Heritage Committee of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization to include the Old City of Jerusalem and its walls on the World Heritage list.

Noting with appreciation the recommendation of the Executive Board of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural organization during its one hundred and thirteenth session that the World Heritage Committee should speed up the procedure for including the Old City of Jerusalem and its walls on the List of World Heritage in Danger.

1.Determines that the excavations and transformations of the landscape and of the historical, cultural and religious sites of Jerusalem constitute a flagrant violation of the principles of international law and the relevant provisions of the Geneva Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949;

2. Decides that such violations by Israel constitute a serious obstruction to achieving a comprehensive and just peace in the Middle East as well as a threat to international peace and security;

3. Demands that Israel desist forthwith from all excavations and transformations of the historical, cultural and religious sites of Jerusalem, particularly beneath and around the Moslem Holy Sanctuary of Al-Masjid Al-Aqsa and the Sacred Dome of the rock), the structures of which are in danger of collapse;

4. Request the Security Council to consider this situation in case Israel fails to comply immediately with the present resolution;

5. Request the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly and the Security Council no later than 23 November 1981, on the implementation of the present resolution.

Adopted at the 42nd plenary meeting” In favor: 114

Against: 2 [Israel, United States]

Abstentions: 27

The United Nations General Assembly today discussed measures to end Israel’s construction of a separation barrier in and around the West Bank after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) declared it to be illegal.

The Assembly met in a resumption of its tenth emergency special session on illegal Israeli actions in occupied East Jerusalem and the rest of the occupied Palestinian territory following a request of the Arab Group.

Last week the ICJ – the UN’s principal judicial organ – issued an advisory opinion saying the separation barrier was illegal and that construction must stop immediately. The Court also said Israel should make reparations for any damage caused, and that the Assembly and the Security Council should consider what steps to take “to bring to an end the illegal situation” created by the situation.

Speaking at the outset of today’s debate, the Permanent Observer of Palestine, Nasser Al-Kidwa, said the ICJ’s advisory opinion constituted a strong, clear and comprehensive determination of the applicable rules of international law, as well as the legal obligations that had arisen from breaches of that law committed by Israel as a result of its construction of the separation wall.

He said a draft resolution before the Assembly had a two-fold purpose: acceptance of the advisory opinion and a call for compliance with international legal obligations from Israel and from other Member States. In the event of non-compliance, States must be ready to undertake actions consistent with their legal obligation, including actions against all settlement activities as well as sanctions against companies or entities involved in the wall’s construction.

Ambassador Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein of Jordan, speaking on behalf of the Arab Group of States, said his delegation was planning to circulate a draft resolution with the aim of not only having the Assembly react positively to the ICJ’s opinion but to see that the ruling’s salient points were reprinted in any subsequent resolution. By supporting the Court’s opinion, the Assembly would show the world that despite the realities of political power and expedience, justice, when sought, could be found.

Ambassador Dan Gillerman of Israel said his country, together with a large number of States, had not supported the request for the ICJ’s advisory opinion because the initiative was counterproductive and harmful. The General Assembly had acted wrongly, politicizing the Court and turning a judicial organ into an actor on the political stage. Now, all those States that had expressed concern about the misuse of the ICJ must be wary of allowing the process to dictate the international agenda, he said.

Israel recognized that it had responsibilities, Ambassador Gillerman said, but it was not alone. The Palestinian side must abandon terror as a strategic choice; that straightforward measure would lead to removal of the fence. In the months since the advisory opinion had been requested, it had become clear that the fence worked. There was now a genuine chance to restart the Road Map as a result of the disengagement plan, he said, crediting the fence’s security benefits for creating the new opportunity.

Ambassador Paul Badji of Senegal, speaking as the Chairman of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, said the ICJ decision was an historic one and if applied fully in good faith, would set the course for the international community to help re-launch the negations between the two sides towards implementation of the Road Map peace plan. Moreover, the Committee would reaffirm the continued leading role of the United Nations in efforts to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict until the objectives of the Road Map had been attained.

Speaking on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement, Ambassador Mohd Radzi Abdul Rahman of Malaysia said the bloc maintained that a just, lasting and comprehensive settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could only be ensured on the basis of relevant Security Council resolutions. The General Assembly must muster the political will necessary to respond to the present situation. As the consequences of allowing the construction of the wall to continue on its present route were fearful, adoption of the draft resolution would send a strong and clear message to Israel and express solidarity with the Palestinian people, he said.

According to a spokesperson for the Assembly’s President, a vote on the revised draft resolution circulated today is scheduled only for Monday.

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