NEW YORK, September 29, 2015 (WAFA) - President Mahmoud Abbas Tuesday affirmed that the Palestinian flag will be raised for the first time at the United Nations headquarters in New York and at other U.N. offices around the world on September 30.
He wrote an op-ed, which was published on the Huffington Post, in which he said the sense of pride among the Palestinian people was overwhelming the day the world voted in favor of this landmark initiative.
Below is the full article:
Tomorrow, the Palestinian flag will be raised for the first time at the United Nations headquarters in New York and at other U.N. offices around the world. The sense of pride among the Palestinian people was overwhelming the day the world voted in favor of this landmark initiative. I am certain that the day our flag rises among the flags of the community of nations will also be a most emotional and proud day.
He added, the General Assembly's vote
confirmed again that we, the people of Palestine, are not alone in our quest
for freedom, fulfillment of our rights and an end to decades of Israeli
occupation and oppression. On September 30, we will raise our flag in a
peaceful gesture that will remind all that justice and independence is
ultimately possible. To get to this destination, we need the support of our
friends around the world and the leadership of the U.N.
As the U.N. this year marks its 70th
anniversary, its longest-standing, unresolved issue is the question of
Palestine. For more than 68 years, my people have been denied their rights and
denied freedom. In 1948, we were cast out of our places of birth and those of
our ancestors; our homes and heritage were destroyed; we were expelled or fled into exile to what were to be temporary
camps until the conflict and question of Palestinian statehood were resolved.
Today, Palestinians remain in exile,
with over five million refugees denied their right to return.
An illegal,
oppressive Israeli occupation denies basic human rights, including the right of
people to self-determination and freedom -- a foundational principle of the
U.N. But the Palestinian people have not given up hope and have not given up
their rightful and just quest to live in independence and peace in our
homeland.
Hope is the power that helps my
people endure and overcome the horrors we have too often faced. Many have
compared living in Palestine to apartheid. But our situation is even more dire
because Israel, the occupying power, is not only executing a system of
segregation and subjugation; it persists with the blatant ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people from their
land. While the Israeli government pays lip service to the two-state solution
internationally, domestically it employs policies aimed at destroying what's left of
Palestine. Israel demolishes our homes, swallows up our land and works at
breaking the spirit and will of our people.
In Bethlehem, Israeli checkpoints and an illegal
annexation wall cages in people, depriving them of their
rights, livelihoods and access to their land. Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
continue to suffer the wounds of last year's barbaric war as Israel's cruel
blockade imprisons the entire population and renders the Strip uninhabitable.
In Occupied East Jerusalem, Israeli forces and leaders aid extremist attacks and religious zealots' attempts to
assert control over Al Aqsa Mosque and ignite a religious conflict. Palestinian
refugees across the region are suffering repeated displacement, dispossession
and trauma, denied the ability to return home.
Countless events every single day
illustrate the ways in which Israel's illegal occupation devastates Palestine.
But few recent events resonated with the world, like the arson attack on the
Dawabsheh family home. A group of Israeli terrorist settlers smashed the
windows of the Dawabsheh home and threw Molotov cocktails inside, immediately burning to death an 18-month-old baby, Ali. Both of Ali's
parents have since perished due to third degree burns. More than a month later,
their now-orphaned 4-year-old son remains in the hospital. The Israeli government has
attempted to disassociate itself from the attack, but the truth is that its
pervasive and systematic colonization of Palestine with settlements, messages
of intolerance, flouting of international law and culture of impunity not only
facilitated that attack but continue to encourage others like it.
Israel's pursuit of reckless
policies obstructs any international progress for the two-state solution. I recall
the high hopes I felt in 1993 when the Oslo Accords were signed and a five-year
deadline set to achieve an end to the occupation and peace and security between
the two states, the state of Palestine and Israel. That was 22 years ago. Since
then, Israel has failed to negotiate in good faith while entrenching its
illegal occupation. Israel is not dedicated to the international community's
values of freedom, justice and peace -- let alone the two-state solution and
the longstanding parameters underpinning it. It has trampled the Oslo Accords
and with it the peace process.
As world leaders gather in New York
to commemorate the U.N.'s 70th anniversary, these same leaders must also
reflect on the U.N.'s failures. Palestine has languished on the U.N. agenda since
the organization's inception. This persistent neglect has cost too many lives,
dampened hope, undermined international law and stained the reputation of the
U.N. World leaders must find the political will to uphold the rule of law,
respect human rights and make good on the commitments they collectively made to
the Palestinian people over decades. The U.N. must give my people more than
hope.
A peaceful, fair and just solution
to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict exists. But the peace process must be
multilateral. The same pattern of negotiations imposed for years will not work
because Israel is the occupying power. Israel controls our territory, natural
resources, economic affairs and our daily lives, violating every fundamental
human right of the Palestinian people. We cannot directly negotiate with a
power that has this level of control and exhibits such contempt for the rights
and existence of our people.
That is why a collective,
multilateral peace process is necessary. Such processes have made significant
progress in difficult negotiations for the Balkans, Libya and Iran. They should
be attempted to decisively end the Palestinian-Israeli conflict after all these
years of futile attempts to achieve peace.
On the vote to raise our flag at the
U.N., the international community demonstrated its solidarity with the
Palestinian people. Now it must act with urgency to seize the momentum from
this symbolic gesture and provide a clear plan to end the illegal Israeli
occupation, uphold human rights and achieve justice. It is time to finally
achieve the independence of the State of Palestine, peacefully resolving the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict -- the core of the Arab-Israeli conflict -- as was
promised long ago.