Non-Aligned
Movement: U.S. blocks peace force
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UNITED NATIONS (IPS)�The 114-member Non-Aligned Movement (NAM),
whose proposal for a UN observer force in the Israeli-occupied West Bank
and Gaza was vetoed by the United States, is planning to take its case
before the General Assembly.
A show of political support�by at least a
predictable two-thirds of the 189 members of the Assembly�is expected
to indicate to the outside world the overwhelming international backing
for the Palestinian cause at the United Nations.
A NAM spokesman said the world at large should know
that the biggest stumbling block for a UN force is just one single
country with veto-power: the United States. A General Assembly vote, he
said, will also indicate that most Western powers only pay lip service
to the cause of the Palestinians.
"When it comes to a political showdown, they
offer plenty of excuses to just chicken out�and abstain," he
added. At a late night session March 28, the United States exercised its
seldom-used veto to reject the NAM resolution calling for "the
establishment of a United Nations observer force" to protect
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.
The only nine countries in the 15-member Security
Council to vote for the resolution were: Bangladesh, China, Colombia,
Jamaica, Mali, Mauritius, Russia, Singapore and Tunisia. The four
Western nations in the Council�namely France, Ireland, Norway and the
United Kingdom�abstained on the vote. The fifteenth member, Ukraine,
did not participate in the vote. The last time the United States
exercised its veto�in March 1997�was also on an issue relating to
Palestinians.
As a result of that U.S. veto, a draft resolution
demanding a halt to the Israeli construction of a new housing settlement
in East Jerusalem was not adopted. Ambassador Anwarul Karim Chowdhury of
Bangladesh, who piloted the NAM resolution, told delegates that at a
recent open debate of the Security Council, the single most important
point made by delegations was the need for an international observer
force to protect Palestinians.
Since December last year, he said, the NAM caucus has
been trying to get agreement on the creation of a UN observer force
"so that the violence could be contained and the safety and
security of Palestinian civilians ensured. But it had proved impossible
for the Security Council to adopt the text."
The Non-Aligned Movement, he said, was frustrated
that it had not been possible to take action.
Nasser al-Kidwa, the Permanent Observer for the
Palestine Mission at the United Nations, told delegates that the failure
to adopt the resolution meant that the Security Council was prevented
from following through with its duties in maintaining international
peace and security.
"It meant failure to contribute to putting an
end to the tragedy of the Palestinians in the occupied territories. It
also meant failure to provide the necessary support to bringing life
back to what was left of the Middle East peace process," he noted.
Ambassador James Cunningham of the United States
expressed great regret that the draft resolution was put to a vote
"at the present time." The United States, he said, would have
supported the resolution if it had called for an end to incitement and
violence, as well as for the implementation of all agreed commitments,
including those reached at a summit meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh early
this year.
Sir Jeremy Greenstock of the United Kingdom said his
country agreed with the need for a mechanism to protect civilians, but
that required the agreement of both parties, namely the Palestinians and
the Israelis. David Cooney of Ireland said his country abstained on the
draft resolution because the agreement of both parties was necessary in
order to deploy an observer force.
Ambassador Yehuda Lancry of Israel reiterated his
country�s rejection of any UN force in the occupied territories.
Meanwhile, addressing the summit meeting of the
22-member League of Arab States in Jordan March 27, Secretary General
Kofi Annan said the current cycle of violence between Palestinians and
Israelis has resulted in hundreds killed and thousands wounded, the
great majority of them Palestinians.
"The international community and the Arab world
have every right to criticize Israel for its continued occupation of
Palestinian and Syrian territory, and for its excessively harsh response
to the intifada (the Palestinian uprising)," he said.
Trying to be even-handed in his criticism, Mr. Annan
also made the case that "these points could be made more
effectively if many Israelis did not believe that their existence was
under threat." |