UNITED NATIONS — With prospects for Middle East peace looking increasingly thin, Palestinian diplomats and officials cheered and applauded on Wednesday as their national flag flew for the first time at United Nations headquarters in New York.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas officiated at the ceremony minutes after delivering a speech to the U.N. General Assembly in which he accused Israel of sabotaging efforts by the United States to broker a peace deal.
Standing under the distinctive red, white, green and black banner in the U.N. headquarters’ flower garden, Abbas said: “The day for raising this flag will come soon in Jerusalem, the capital of our Palestinian state” and “this day, every year, Sept. 30, will be the day of the Palestinian flag.”
The General Assembly approved a Palestinian resolution this month, saying flags of non-member states “shall be raised at (U.N.) Headquarters (in New York) and United Nations Offices following the flags of the member states.”
The United States and Israel were among eight countries that voted against the Palestinian-drafted flag resolution. Both said at the time that symbolic moves like raising flags do nothing to move the peace process forward.
While some Palestinians celebrated the flag, others questioned the benefits of the symbolic move. Activists, who accuse the Palestinian Authority of oppressing the people of the West Bank to prevent a popular uprising, played down the gesture.
In an address to the United Nations General Assembly before a ceremony, Abbas said the Palestinian Authority no longer considered itself bound by the accords signed with Israel in the mid-1990s.
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