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Palestinian Leaders Advocate Unilateral Steps to Declare
an Independent State
29 December 1998
Israel views with great concern the repeated declarations made by
the Palestinian leadership of their intention to take the unilateral
step of declaring on May 4th 1999 an independent Palestinian
state with Jerusalem as its capital. Such unilateral action
constitutes a flagrant violation of the Israel-Palestinian Interim
Agreement, which clearly prohibits either party from changing the
status of the West Bank and Gaza prior to the conclusion of the
permanent status negotiations between the sides. This principle
was among the basic foundations of the peace process as
enumerated in the letter sent by Yasser Arafat to Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin on 9 September 1993. Furthermore, this principle
was reiterated in the all the agreements signed between Israel and
the Palestinians since Oslo, and most recently reaffirmed in the
Wye River Memorandum of October 1998.
However, despite the centrality of this principle to the negotiating
process, Palestinian leaders have repeatedly made public statements
regarding their intention to unilaterally declare a Palestinian state
on May 4, 1999, which was envisioned as the original target date
for the achievement of a negotiated permanent status
arrangements.
An example of these statements can be seen in the words of the
speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Assembly, Ahmed Qurreia
(Abu Ala). In a recent article appearing in the December 21 edition
of the Gaza daily Al Hayat Al Jedida, Abu Ala wrote:
"We must constantly reiterate that we will not, under any
circumstance, renege on our strategic promise to establish a
Palestinian state with the holy city of Jerusalem as its capital.
... On May 4, 1999, a political, legal and administrative vacuum
will be created in the territories, and it will then be incumbent
upon the Palestinian Authority and its institutions to declare the
Palestinian state, which will fill this vacuum.
... The May 4th declaration of a Palestinian state is a fait
accompli, in the sense that the legitimacy which enables this has
already been achieved in accordance with international law,
meaning that the Palestinian state already exists in practical terms.
... It is also appropriate to stress that this state already has borders
which have been internationally recognized, and these are the
borders determined by the 1947 UN Partition Resolution.
... Our people has gathered up the links of sovereignty one by one,
in order to realize the statement which encapsulates all our
dreams: "The independent Palestinian state with the holy city of
Jerusalem as its capital". The question is whether we will declare
it after an exhaustive negotiation, which is preferable, or whether
we'll declare it unilaterally, as an expression of loyalty to our
people and our martyrs, which we must fulfill. The coming months
will provide the answer for this question. The 4th of May is
approaching."
(End of Text)
Israel, for its part, remains committed to the achievement of peace
as a paramount goal. Notwithstanding the recent internal political
developments in the country, Israel will fulfill its commitments
under the Wye River Memorandum in accordance with the agreed
timetable, including the further redeployment, this subsequent to
the complete Palestinian fulfillment of their appropriate
obligations at every phase of the agreement's implementation.
Source: Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
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