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Palestine


Please read the introduction underneath, the links to further information follows immediately after that.


The Palestine problem, Introduction. (An extract from a study prepared by the Division for Palestine Rights of the United Nations Secretariat.)


The question of Palestine was brought before the United Nations shortly after the end of the Second World War.

The origin of the Palestine problem as an international issue, however, lie in the events occurring towards the end of the First World War. these events led to a League of Nations decission to place Palestine under the administration of Great Britain as the Mandatory Power under the Mandates System adopted by the League. In principle, the Mandate was meant to be in the nature of a transitory phase until Palestine attained the status of a fully independent nation, a status provisionally recognized in the Leagues Covenant, but in fact the Mandates historical evolution did not result in the emergence of Palestine as an independent nation.

The decision on the Mandate did not take into account the wishes of the people of Palestine, despite the Covenant's requirement that "the wishes of these communities must be a principal consideration in the selection of the mandatory". This assumed special significance because, almost five years before receiving the mandate from the League of Nations, the British Government had given commitments to the Zionist Organization regarding the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine, for which Zionist leaders had pressed a claim of "historical connection" since their ancestors had lived in Palestine two thousand years earlier before dispersing in the "Diaspora".

During the period of the Mandate, the Zionist Organization worked to secure the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine. The indigenous people of Palestine, whose forefathers had inhabited the land for virtually the two preceding millennia felt this design to be a violation of their natural and inalienable rights. They also viewed it as an infringement of assurances given by the Allied powers to Arab leaders in return for their support during the war. The result was mounting resistance to the Mandate by Palestine Arabs, followed by resort to violence by the Jewish community as the Second World War drew to a close.

After a quarter of century of the Mandate, Great Britain submitted what had become "the Palestine problem" to the United Nations on the grounds that the Mandatory Power was faced with conflicting obligations that had proved irreconcilable. At this point, when United Nations itself was hardly two years old, violence ravaged Palestine. After investigating various alternatives the United Nations proposed partitioning of Palestine into two independent States, one Palestinian Arab and the other Jewish, with Jerusalem internationalized. The partition plan did not bring peace to Palestine, and the prevailing violence spread into a Middle East war halted only by United Nations action. One of the two States envisaged in the partition plan never appeared on the world's map and, over the following 30 years, the Palestinian people have struggled for their lost rights.

The Palestine problem quickly widened into the Middle East dispute between the Arab States and Israel. From 1948 there have been wars and destruction, forcing millions of Palestinian into exile, and engaging United Nations in a continuing search for a solution to a problem which came to possess the potential of a major source of danger for world peace.

In the course of this search, a large majority of States Members of the United Nations have recognized that the Palestine issue continues to lie at the heart of the Middle East problem, the most serious threat to peace with which the United Nations must content. Recognition is spreading in the world opinion that the Palestine people must be assured its inherent inalienable right of national self-determination for peace to be restored.

In 1947 the United Nations accepted the responsibility of finding a just solution for the Palestine issue, and still grapples with this task today. Decades of strife and politico-legal arguments have clouded the basic issues and have obscured the origins and evolution of the Palestine problem.


Links

If you are interested in obtaining more information or to study these issues further, please follow the link provided underneath.


LINK

United Nations, The Division for Palestinian Rights (UNDPA/DPR)

Comprehensive index and links to documents and studies on the question of Palestine

LINK

UN Information System on the Question of Palestine (UNISPAL)

A full text-searchable database on the question of Palestine, the peace process, the Middle East and a variety of related issues

LINK

Peace in the Middle East?

The Peace of the Brave


To e-mail me now,E-Mailclick underneath.

schultz@asianor.com


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