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December 08, 1989 - Image 56

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-12-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I NEWS 1

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UN Delays Vote On PLO
Amid American Threats

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The resolution, which was
sponsored by 16 Arab states
and introduced on the Gen-
eral Assembly floor by
Kuwait, stated that the PLO
observer mission, "shall be
construed within the United
Nations as the State of
Palestine."
The PLO observer mission
is now referred to as
"Palestine."
The General Assembly did
take action on three anti-
Israel resolutions .
The first, which passed by
a vote of 109-18, calls for
Israel's withdrawal from all
"occupied territories," reaf-
firms the Palestinians' right
to a state and calls for an in-
ternational peace con-
ference.

The other two resolutions
were both adopted by over-
whelming margins. The se-
cond resolution, which pass-
ed 84-22, with 49 absten-
tions, condemns Israeli
"occupation" of the Golan
Heights and calls on all
member states to cease all
dealings with Israel.
The third declares Israel's
jurisdiction over Jerusalem
to be illegal and condemns
those countries whose dip-
lomatic missions are located
there. That measure was ap-
proved 147-2, with only
eight countries abstaining.

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PLO Insists On Role
In Mideast Peace Talks

I.

Washington (JTA) —
Hopes of realizing Israel's
plans for Palestinian elec-
tions in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip seem to be
dwindling.
The Palestine Liberation
Organization delivered a
memorandum Dec. 1 to the
U.S. ambassador in Tunis,
Robert Pelletreau, insisting
that "no Palestinian delega-
tion will come to the
negotiating table without
being named and announced
by the PLO."
At the State Department,
deputy spokesman Richard
Boucher said last week that
Hakam Balawi, the PLO
representative in Tunis,
described the memorandum
as unofficial when he
delivered it.
In Israel, aides to Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir
expressed indifference to the
PLO memo. "We are not in-
terested in what the PLO

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United Nations (JTA) — A
scheduled vote in the Gen-
eral Assembly on a resolu-
tion that would upgrade the
Palestine Liberation
Organization's status to that
of an observer state has been
postponed for the second
time.
But the latest move would
appear only to delay the
death of the measure, which
diplomats here now believe
to be inevitable.
U.N. General Assembly
President Joseph Garba an-
nounced last week that the
Arab-sponsored resolution,
which had been due for votes
Dec. 1 and then on Dec. _4,
was to have been delayed
until Dec. 6.
Arab states asked the
United States for two con-
cessions in return for dropp-
ing their initiative. The
Arabs asked the Americans
not to threaten the world
body with financial sanc,
tions. They also requested
some "visual enhancement"
of the PLO's position at the
UN.
U.S. State Department
Spokeswoman Margaret
Tutwiler said last week that
if the pro-PLO resolution
was adopted, the United
States would cut off its funds
for the United Nations. U.S.
funds comprise 25 percent of
the UN's budget.

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says. We are only interested
in Egypt's response, and
that has not yet reached
Washington," said one offi-
cial in the Prime Minister's
Office.
Boucher said the United
States is "looking forward to
an official Egyptian reply"
to Secretary of State James
Baker's five-point proposal
for Israel-Egyptian negotia-
tions.
After some public arm-
twisting by Baker, Israel's
Inner Cabinet accepted
Baker's proposal with cer-
tain "assumptions," in-
cluding that the Israeli-
Palestinian dialogue be lim-
ited to setting up the propos-
ed elections and that the
PLO be excluded from any
part in the process.
Boucher reiterated that
"we have never sought and
we are not now seeking a
PLO response to the five
points."

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