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SECRETARY-GENERAL'S STATEMENTS

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Secretary-General, in
Message for Day of Solidarity with Palestinian People, Stresses Need to
Reverse Growing Despair over Vanishing Statehood Dream
New York, 29 November 2007 |
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Following is the text of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s
statement for the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian
People, observed on 29 November:
This International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
comes at a time when Palestinians continue to suffer the indignities
and violence of occupation and conflict, but also at a time when a new
beginning has been made in efforts to achieve a two-State solution to
the conflict.
Two days ago in Annapolis, President [Mahmoud] Abbas and Prime
Minister [Ehud] Olmert, meeting under the auspices of President
[George W.] Bush and before a wide cross-section of the international
community, including members of the Arab League, agreed to launch
negotiations on all core issues without exception, in order to
conclude a peace treaty resolving all outstanding issues. They
pledged to make every effort to do this in 2008.
Implementation is now paramount. What we do tomorrow is more
important than what we say today. In Annapolis, I pledged the full
support of the United Nations for the renewed effort. I stressed
that, for 60 years, the Organization has provided the broad parameters
for peace, first in the partition plan and then in Security Council
resolutions 242, 338, 1397 and 1515, and that today, the United
Nations has few higher priorities than seeing this conflict resolved.
We all know the reasons why. The Palestinians have been deprived
of their inalienable right to self-determination for 60 years.
Palestinian society has been increasingly fragmented --
territorially, by settlements, land expropriation and the barrier in
the Occupied Palestinian Territory; socially and economically, by
closure; and politically, between Gaza and the West Bank. They have
begun to fear that the dream of statehood may slip beyond their grasp.
This growing sense of despair must be reversed.
The process launched at Annapolis must change the lives of
Palestinians and secure their independence and freedom. The process
must end the occupation and create an independent and viable State of
Palestine, at peace with itself and its neighbours. It also must
deliver on the vital interests of Israelis: a Palestinian State that
is a true partner and not a source of terrorism; secure and recognized
borders; and a permanent end to the conflict.
We cannot close our eyes to the profound doubt and mistrust on
either side about the will and capacity of the other to achieve these
goals. Despite several diplomatic landmarks, conditions on the ground
have become harder, not easier, for most Palestinians, and for many
Israelis too. Israel faces genuine security threats, and
Israeli civilians have died and been wounded in rocket attacks.
Palestinian civilians have been killed and injured in Israeli
military operations. The Gaza Strip has been almost entirely closed,
with tight restrictions on supplies and movements of people, leading
to a grave humanitarian situation. Settlements have expanded
throughout the West Bank. Checkpoints and a barrier have been erected
on occupied land. Unemployment and poverty are rising.
The indignities, injustices and fear on both sides make it
difficult to build faith in the political process. But that is
exactly what we have to do. We must abandon piecemeal approaches and
address all aspects of the conflict.
Final status negotiations need to begin in earnest and address all
the issues: Jerusalem, refugees, borders, settlements, security and
water. The broad outlines of solutions to these issues are clear.
We must also help the Palestinian Authority to rebuild, reform and
perform. I hope a wide range of donors will step forward with
political and financial support at the upcoming Paris conference and
beyond.
The situation on the ground must also improve, rapidly and visibly.
Without implementing long-standing commitments under the Road Map and
the Agreement on Movement and Access, the diplomatic process cannot
succeed. Progress requires parallel actions and clear monitoring.
If peace is built on hope, not despair, we must also reach out to
the people of Gaza. They have suffered more than anyone else from
conflict and poverty. Humanitarian aid is vital and United Nations
efforts need the support of donors. But such aid is no substitute for
a functioning economy. The time has come for concrete initiatives to
ease their suffering. The unity of Gaza and the West Bank under the
legitimate Palestinian Authority will also have to be restored for a
peace agreement to be sustainable.
The vision of an end of occupation, an end of conflict and two
States living side by side in peace is a vision of justice, security
and peace. It is still achievable. But it will only happen if all
involved take responsibility for contributing what they can. Now that
the Palestinian leadership has embarked on a new quest with Israel to
end the conflict and secure a better future for their children, let us
show our solidarity with the Palestinian people -- and the Israeli
people too -- by giving our unyielding support to their efforts and
not resting until the goal is achieved.
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