Palestinians seek UN upgrade but powers elusive
Topics: From the Wires, News
Plestinian security officers train in the West Bank town of Jenin, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012. The Palestinians will request the UN to upgrade their status to an observer state on November 29. The status could add weight to Palestinian claims for a state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war from Jordan.(AP Photo/Mohammed Ballas)(Credit: AP)UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Once the Palestinians achieve their goal of an upgrade to nonmember observer state status at the United Nations on Wednesday, they face a series of struggles to capitalize on that recognition throughout the U.N. system.
The Palestinian Authority, which has the majority support needed in the General Assembly, would join the Vatican as the only other entity with nonmember observer state status after the body votes. In practice, the Palestinians gain few new powers.
Much of what unfolds will depend on how hard the Palestinians want to pursue membership in various agencies, and who will support them. Here’s a look at how the Palestinians’ role could change at the U.N.:
— The upgraded Palestinian Authority still won’t be able to introduce resolutions to the General Assembly. Like the Vatican, the Palestinians would have to find a sympathetic nation-state or bloc of nations in the Assembly to introduce any resolution — as they do now.
Last year, the Palestinians tried and failed to get full U.N. member-state status. The Security Council must approve new members, and the United States made clear it would veto any Palestinian attempt. So the doomed full membership bid was never brought forward for a full council vote.
— The International Court of Justice, often called the “World Court,” accepts only disputes between fully recognized member-states of the U.N. In the past, countries that were not yet U.N. members — Switzerland and Nauru — accepted the jurisdiction of the court. However, parties to any dispute must be willing to accept the court’s judgment, and it is hard to imagine any case in which both Israel and the Palestinians would agree to be bound by the court’s decision.
— The International Criminal Court at the Hague can review war crimes, and Israel has objected to the possibility of the Palestinians bringing cases to the ICC. But to do so, the Palestinians would have to file papers of “accession” under the Rome Treaty that set up the ICC. That membership option is open to “all states.”
In practice, the application to become a “state” member of the ICC system would go to the office of the U.N. Secretary-General, which is the official repository for signatures. The U.N. chief’s office would, in that case, have to turn to the U.N. legal department for an opinion on whether the Palestinians constitute a “state.”




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