The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) will go to the United Nations Security Council and seek full membership in the world body next week, despite the looming threat of a
The announcement was made by Mohammed Shtayyeh, a senior member of Fatah's central committee, at a news conference in Ramallah on Tuesday. Fatah is the largest Palestinian faction in the PLO.
His announcement would seem to end months of speculation about the PLO's diplomatic strategy.
"We are going to the United Nations, we are going to the Security Council," Shtayyeh said. "We are going to seek full membership based on 1967 borders."
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority (PA) president, will deliver a speech in Ramallah on Friday night outlining the bid.
Full recognition would allow
The PLO will have little trouble securing the required two-thirds majority at the General Assembly; more than 120 nations have already promised to support the bid, according to Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator.
But the White House and various other
In that case, the PLO could still pursue "non-member observer status," which would give it diplomatic standing on a par with the
Next steps uncertain
Shtayyeh acknowledged that, even if the United Nations approves the bid, it will not immediately change daily life for Palestinians.
"Things on the ground are not going to be different," he said. "The difference will happen on the political level. Palestinians will join UN institutions... and the Palestinian territories will no longer be considered 'disputed lands' but occupied lands."
Shtayyeh said the PLO was undecided on how it would respond to a
The announcement also signals that the PLO does plan to go through with the bid, despite a last-minute diplomatic push by the
Shtayyeh said Abbas would submit the official paperwork after arriving in
Salah Bardawil, a senior Hamas official in
"It's a unilateral action by Abbas, just like
No response from Israel, EU
The Israeli government did not directly comment on the PLO's announcement, but Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Israeli prime minister, reiterated the government's opposition to the bid.
"You can get a piece of paper through the United Nations, but you cannot get an independent state," he told Al Jazeera.
The US State Department issued a brief statement on Tuesday, calling the UN bid "unhelpful to the necessary process of the two sides getting back to the negotiating table," an argument it has made many times before.
Two
Palestinian officials expect a majority of the 27-nation European Union to support their bid. But EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who attended an Arab League meeting in Cairo on Monday night, said that the EU's official position is to support renewed negotiations instead of a UN vote.
The PA is planning a series of marches and rallies, in the
The bid has been sharply criticized by many Palestinians, particularly in
Abbas has described the bid as a "last resort" brought on by the collapse of negotiations between
Talks have been stalled for nearly a year over
PA officials say the impasse leaves them with no choice but to turn to the UN; Abbas has offered to suspend the bid and resume talks if
Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, insists that he will only resume talks without those preconditions.
PHOTO CAPTION
Memebers of the Palestinian negotiation team (L-R) Yasser Abd Rabbo, Saeb Muhammad Salih Erekat, Nabil Shaath and Mohammad Shtayyeh
Al Jazeera