RAMALLAH, November 15, 2014 – (WAFA) -
On November 15,
1988, the Palestinian National Council, then led by late President Yasser
Arafat, declared the independence of the State of Palestine on the 1967 border.
“This was the historic Palestinian compromise:
We accepted that our state would exist on only 22 percent of our historic
homeland,” said the Palestine Liberation Organization Negotiations Affairs
Department in a press release.
“Twenty six years after Palestine’s
Historic Compromise, the
State of Palestine declares its belief in the settlement of international and
regional disputes by peaceful means in accordance with the charter and
resolutions of the United Nations.”
“Israel responded by colonizing more
of our land and entrenching its control over the occupied West Bank, including
East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip”, causing the possibility of a two-state
solution to ‘quickly fade away’, it added.
In a clear message to the
international community to act, the PLO Department said:“The international
community must now act decisively in order to salvage the two-state solution.
The international community’s recognition of a State of Palestine on all of the
territory occupied by Israel in 1967 would be an important first step.”
“In the twenty-six years since the
Declaration was made, we have campaigned vigorously for an end to Israeli
occupation and the attainment of a two-state solution. In 1991, three years
after our Declaration of Independence, we entered negotiations with Israelis in
Madrid. Beginning with the Declaration of Principles (Oslo Accords) in
September 1993, we signed numerous agreements with the Israel in hopes of resolving
the conflict,” said the PLO Department.
“We signed these agreements in good
faith, with the expectation that the peace process would free us from the yoke
of Israel’s military occupation, lead to the establishment of an independent
and sovereign Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital and the 1967
boundaries as its borders, and bring justice to the millions of Palestinian
refugees.”
“However,
since the Palestinian Declaration of Independence, Israel has strengthened its
control over the occupied State of Palestine. While we worked on building our
independent state, Israel continued its colonization of our land. In 1989,
there were 189,900 Israeli settlers living in the occupied State of Palestine.
Today, the population of Israeli settlers goes over 600,000,” the PLO
Department added.
Calling
for ending Israel’s impunity, it said: “Israel’s complete lack of
accountability for its actions has led to a culture of impunity that threatens
to destroy the last hope for a two-state solution.”
Calling the
international state to recognize the State of Palestine as an effective step,
the PLO Department said: “One effective step that the international community
can take is to recognize the State of Palestine over the 1967 border with East
Jerusalem as its capital and support Palestine’s diplomatic initiatives such as
the UNSC resolution to put an end to the Israeli occupation as well as our
access to international treaties and organizations. This will provide
additional support to the two-state solution between Israel and Palestine while
nullifying any Israeli attempt to change the status quo of the occupied State
of Palestine.”
Stressing
the importance of non-violent struggle to gain independence, the PLO Department
urged the international community to “ban all Israeli settlement products,
divest from all companies involved directly or indirectly in the Israeli
occupation and take all possible measures in order to hold Israel, the
occupying power, accountable for its daily violations to Palestinian rights and
international law.”
K.F./
T.R.