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Negroponte vetoes the anti-Israel resolution
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UNITED
NATIONS, September 17 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Giving
Israel the go-ahead to continue its aggressions in the Palestinian
territories, the U.S. on Tuesday, September 16, killed a U.N. draft
resolution condemning Israel for threatening to expel Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat.
Eleven
of the 15 Council nations voted in favor of the measure, which was
sponsored by Syria, the Council's only Arab member, at the request of
the Palestinians, while Britain, Bulgaria and Germany abstained,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Arguing
the draft took no steps to tackle Palestinian resistance groups, the
U.S. used its veto power despite a chorus of rage over the threat to
force the Palestinian leader out of the occupied Palestinian
territories.
"We
will not support any (draft) resolution that evades the explicit
threat to the Middle East peace process posed by Hamas and other such
terrorist groups," argued John Negroponte, the U.S. ambassador to
the U.N.
In
an emergency meeting on Thursday, September 11, under Premier Ariel
Sharon, the Israeli security cabinet agreed
by majority to outline a plan to expel Arafat.
The
United States wanted specific language in the draft denouncing
Palestinian resistance groups such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Al
Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, the armed offshoot of Fatah.
Negroponte
said the draft was "flawed" because it did not include a
"robust condemnation of acts of terrorism" by Palestinian
resistance, said the BBC News Online.
The
draft resolution had demanded Israel to "desist from any act of
deportation and cease any threat to the safety of the elected
president of the Palestinian Authority."
British
ambassador Emyr Jones Parry, however, cautioned the veto should not
lead Israel to "misunderstand the international community's
unanimous rejection of their decision in principle to remove President
Arafat."
Tuesday's
vote followed hours of unusually harsh mudslinging when Nasser
al-Kidwa, the Palestinian U.N. representative, walked out during the
address by Dan Gillerman, the Israeli ambassador to the Council.
The
Bush administration used its veto power to curtail U.N. moves to
condemn Israel for 24 times, the last one in December of last year.
The
council's schism also came as senior U.N. Middle East envoy Terje
Roed-Larsen told the Council Monday that the Mideast peace process was
at a standstill and laid much of the blame on Israel.
'
Black Day'
The
veto, in the meanwhile, was condemned by the Palestinians and Arab
diplomats in the world body.
Member
of the Palestinian Legislative Council Saeb Erekat described the veto
as "a black day" for the U.N. and said he hoped Israel would
not interpret it as a "license to kill," said the BBC.
Senior
Arafat’s adviser Nabil Abu Rudeina told AFP the veto would make it
more difficult to implement the so-called roadmap, an international
peace plan aimed at creating a Palestinian state by 2005.
Islamic
Jihad's Mohammad al-Hindi said the U.S. veto "proves that the
Americans only see our region through Zionist eyes."
For
his part, al-Kidwa warned that "serious consequences could follow
this veto and the United States alone bears the responsibility for
that."
Fayssal
Mekdad, a Syrian diplomat, dismissed the veto as
"regrettable" because "it only complicates a situation
in the Middle East that is already extraordinarily complicated."
The
veto came after Israel spurned
Tuesday a new Palestinian ceasefire proposal and assassinated an
Islamic Jihad activist.
The
latest deterioration came after the main Palestinian resistance groups
called off a fragile unilateral truce after a series of Israeli
assassinations of resistance activists, particularly Hamas senior
political leader Ismail
Abu Shanab.