Israel says
it welcomes the UN Security Council's rejection of a Palestinian proposal
demanding an end to Israeli occupation within three years. It called instead
for further dialogue between the two sides.
Israel on
Wednesday hailed a decision by the United Nations Security Council not to adopt a Palestinian-drafted resolution that would have called on the Jewish state to
end its occupation on Palestinian territories within three years.
"Every
Israeli who wants peace with our neighbors can only be satisfied with the
results of this vote," deputy foreign minister Tzahi HaNegbi told Israel
Radio.
"That
is what the world said yesterday to the Palestinians: "You must hold a
dialogue with the Israelis. The Israelis have the right to stand on the
international and security interests, and don't use us, the international forum
of the UN, to try and solve a conflict between two sides," he added.
He also
described the resolution as an attempt "to embarrass and isolate
Israel."
One vote
short
The
Security Council rejected the resolution late on Tuesday, with eight members
voting in favor, two against and five abstentions. Nine votes would have been
required for the vote to be adopted by the 15-member council.
Those in
favor included Russia, China and France, while the United States and Australia
voted against.
The US, a
close ally of Israel, had always opposed the resolution, saying a negotiated
peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians was the only way forward, and
these sentiments were reiterated by US Ambassador Samantha Power after the
vote.
"We
voted against this resolution not because we are comfortable with the status
quo. We voted against it because ... peace must come from hard compromises that
occur at the negotiating table," Power said, adding that the deadlines
laid out in the draft resolution did not take into account "Israeli
legitimate security concerns."
'Genuine
peace effort'
The
Palestinian side, for its part, voiced disappointment at the decision and said
it would mull further steps, including seeking to join the International
Criminal Court (ICC), where it could sue Israeli officials for war crimes
committed in the occupied territories.
"Our
effort was a serious effort, genuine effort, to open the door for peace,"
said Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador.
"Unfortunately,
the Security Council is not ready to listen to that message," he added.
Russia also
voiced its regret at the Security Council decision, with UN envoy Vitaly
Churkin calling it a "strategic error."
The draft
resolution set a one-year deadline for negotiations with Israel and demanded a
full Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank by the end of 2017.
Palestinian
negotiator Saab Erekat said the resolution could be resubmitted to the Security
Council in the next few days, with five new non-permanent members starting on
Thursday who are seen as more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.
If this
failed, he said, Palestinians would push on with their plans to join the ICC.
tj/es (AP, dpa, AFP)
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