Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

UN rejects Palestinian-backed resolution to end Israel's occupation within 3 years

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Dec, 2014 10:37 AM

    The U.N. Security Council rejected a Palestinian resolution demanding an end to Israeli occupation within three years late Tuesday, a blow to efforts to get the U.N.'s most powerful body to take action to recognize an independent state of Palestine.

    The United States, Israel's closest ally, had made clear its opposition to the draft resolution and would have used its veto if necessary. But it didn't have to because the resolution failed to get the minimum nine "yes" votes required for adoption by the 15-member council.

    The resolution received eight "yes" votes, two "no" votes — one from the United States and the other from Australia — and five abstentions. Until shortly before the vote, council diplomats had expected the resolution to get nine "yes" votes. But Nigeria, which had been expected to vote "yes," abstained.

    The defeated resolution would have affirmed the urgent need to achieve "a just, lasting and comprehensive peaceful solution" to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict within 12 months and set a Dec. 31, 2017 deadline for Israel's occupation to end.

    It also called for an independent state of Palestine to be established within the 1967 Mideast borders — before Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — and demanded "a just solution" to all other outstanding issues, including Palestinian refugees, prisoners in Israeli jails and water.

    Canada, also a staunch supporter of Israel, has said it will oppose any unilateral action that is not negotiated by both sides.

    Foreign Minister John Baird dismissed the latest resolution as just another attempt to circumvent negotiations and place preconditions on future discussions.

    In a statement Tuesday, Baird said Canada was calling on members of the UN Security Council to reject the resolution and instead use its influence to urge both sides to sit down without preconditions.

    Jordan's U.N. Ambassador Dina Kawar, the Arab representative on the Security Council, said after the vote: "The fact that this draft resolution was not adopted will not at all prevent us from proceeding to push the international community, specifically the United Nations, towards an effective involvement to achieving a resolution to this conflict."

    U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power said: "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."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jannik Hansen pulled from Canucks' lineup hours before game with Coyotes

    Jannik Hansen pulled from Canucks' lineup hours before game with Coyotes
    VANCOUVER — Jannik Hansen has been removed from the Vancouver Canucks lineup ahead of Monday's home game against the Arizona Coyotes.

    Jannik Hansen pulled from Canucks' lineup hours before game with Coyotes

    New research out of B.C. university helps team take bite out of bedbug epidemic

    New research out of B.C. university helps team take bite out of bedbug epidemic
    VANCOUVER — Enduring 180,000 bites is the scientific price a British Columbia biologist had to pay so her team of researchers could suck a little life out of the worldwide bedbug epidemic.

    New research out of B.C. university helps team take bite out of bedbug epidemic

    Study involving UBC scientist says Chinook salmon could be wiped out by 2100

    Study involving UBC scientist says Chinook salmon could be wiped out by 2100
    VANCOUVER — New climate-change research involving a University of British Columbia scientist predicts that one of the West Coast's most prized salmon stocks could be wiped out over the next 85 years.

    Study involving UBC scientist says Chinook salmon could be wiped out by 2100

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?
    TORONTO — Smoke it, toke it, vape it, eat it — marijuana, it seems, is going mainstream.

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Three dead in apartment fire southwest of Montreal

    Three dead in apartment fire southwest of Montreal
    LES COTEAUX, Que. — A man and woman and one of their children are dead after a fire at an apartment building southwest of Montreal early this morning.

    Three dead in apartment fire southwest of Montreal

    Canadian teacher's trial begins in Indonesia, family says he has mixed emotions

    Canadian teacher's trial begins in Indonesia, family says he has mixed emotions
    The trial of a Canadian teacher accused of sexually abusing three students at an international school in Indonesia began Tuesday by hearing from an alleged victim, his family said.

    Canadian teacher's trial begins in Indonesia, family says he has mixed emotions