Why Abbas Wants to Go Back to the UN in September (GateStone Institute) by Khaled Abu Toameh 08/02/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3239/abbas-un
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Abbas´s decision to return to the UN is not only a ploy to avoid
internal problems at home, it is also a way of trying to extort the
Americans and Europeans into channeling more funds into his coffers.
Abbas´s threat: Give me more money or I will misbehave and file
another request with the UN.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is now saying that he
will resume his efforts in September to achieve, unilaterally, UN
recognition of a Palestinian state.
A similar attempt by Abbas in September last year failed after he
failed to secure the backing of a majority of members of the UN
Security Council.
This time, however, Abbas says he will go to the General Assembly,
where the Palestinians enjoy the support of more than 130 countries,
with a request to recognize a Palestinian state as a non-member of
the UN.
Last week, Abbas even won the backing of the Arab League for his new
statehood bid at the UN.
Abbas´s renewed efforts at the UN are an attempt to cover up for his
repeated blunders at home.
The Palestinian president is planning to travel to New York at a time
when he cannot visit his private house, which has been occupied by
Hamas, in the Gaza Strip.
Many Palestinians hold Abbas responsible for the continued power
struggle with Hamas -- a five-year-old conflict that has resulted in
the creation of two separate Palestinian entities, one in the West
Bank and the other in the Gaza Strip.
They say that it is Abbas´s refusal to accept the results of the 2006
parliamentary election, which saw Hamas win the majority of the
ballots cast, that triggered the ongoing conflict with the Islamist
movement and eventually led to the expulsion of the Palestinian
Authority from the Gaza Strip.
Persistent attempts by a number of Arab countries to end the rivalry
between Abbas´s Fatah faction and Hamas have thus far been
unsuccessful. Most Palestinians doubt if the two parties will be able
to overcome their differences in the foreseeable future.
The Palestinians will have to live for many years with just two small
states. Abbas is therefore going to the UN to ask for recognition of
a Palestinian state when his people already have two separate
entities, two prime ministers and two governments.
Abbas´s planned visit to New York coincides with a report published
last week by the World Bank, disclosing that, because of the
Palestinians´ heavy reliance on foreign aid, the Palestinian
economy´s recent growth is unsustainable. His renewed efforts to
achieve UN recognition also coincide with what Palestinian officials
describe as the worst financial crisis facing the government of Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad.
Because of the crisis, the Fayyad government has not been able to pay
full salaries to its 150,000 employees.
Instead of devoting his efforts to solving the financial crisis and
ending the power struggle with Hamas, Abbas has decided that it would
be better if he sparked another confrontation with the US by going
back to the UN.
Abbas is hoping to divert attention from his problems at home by
embarking on a new "adventure" at the UN. From now until September,
he is hoping to keep everyone busy with the new statehood bid at the
UN.
Civil servants who are not receiving full salaries will be asked to
stay quiet because their president is too busy waging a diplomatic
intifada against the US and Israel at the UN.
Hamas will be asked to remain quiet and stop criticizing him because
Abbas is "fighting in the international arena" to achieve UN
recognition of a Palestinian state.
Abbas´s decision to go back to the UN is also linked to growing
criticism of his leadership among Palestinians, including former top
Palestinian Authority officials who are accusing him and his sons of
involvement in corruption scandals.
Finally, the UN members will have to ask Abbas when he arrives in New
York whether he really has a mandate from his people to speak and act
on their behalf. Abbas´s term in office expired in January 2009 - a
deadline that has not stopped him from continuing to claim that he is
the legitimate leader of the Palestinians.
Abbas´s decision to go back to the UN is nothing but a ploy designed
to avoid internal problems. It is also a way of trying to extort the
Americans and Europeans into channeling more funds into his coffers.
Abbas´s threat: Give me more money or I will misbehave and file
another request with the UN.
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