| Editorial Note: The 
		  following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may 
		  also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. 
		  Comments are in parentheses. *** 
		  UNGA Passes Resolution Urging Security Council 
		  to Give Favorable Consideration to Full Palestinian Membership
		   
		  May 13, 2024 
 
			  
				  |  |  |  
				  | Results of the UN General 
				  Assembly's vote on the resolution on the status of the Observer State of Palestine, May 10, 2024
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				  |  |  |    Full List of Countries Who Voted to Give 
		  Palestine New UN Power Newsweek, Published May 10, 2024 at 1:15 PM EDT Updated May 12, 2024 at 12:15 PM  By Mandy 
		  Taheri  In an overwhelming majority vote, the U.N. General Assembly passed 
		  a resolution to provide new "rights and privileges" to a Palestinian 
		  state and push the UN Security Council to reconsider their admission 
		  as the 194th member 
		  of the U.N. The vote does not guarantee membership. Out of the 193 UN member states,143 countries supported the 
		  resolution, 9 voted against it, 25 abstained, and 16 did not vote. The 9 countries which voted against 
		  the resolution were: Argentina, Czech Republic, Hungary, Israel, 
		  Micronesia, United States, 
		  Papa New Guinea, Nauru, and Palau. The 25 countries which abstained 
		  from voting were: Albania, Austria, Bulgaria,
		  Canada, Croatia, 
		  Fiji, Finland, Georgia, Germany,
		  Italy, Latvia, 
		  Lithuania, Malawi, Marshall Islands, Monaco,
		  Netherlands, North 
		  Macedonia, Paraguay, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Sweden, 
		  Switzerland, Ukraine, United 
		  Kingdom, and Vanuatu. *** Note: 
		  Countries 
		  highlighted with red color have been providing the Israeli occupation 
		  apartheid regime with weapons, financial support, directly like the 
		  US, or indirectly  through investment, and through weapon 
		  research & development cooperation. *** 143 countries voted in favor of the resolution: Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua-Barbuda, Armenia, Australia, 
		  Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belarus, Belgium, 
		  Belize, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, 
		  Brazil, Brunei, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cambodia, Central 
		  African Republic, Chad, Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros, Costa Rica, 
		  Côte d'Ivoire, Cuba, Cyprus, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, 
		  Denmark, Djibouti, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Egypt, El Salvador, 
		  Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, France, Gabon, Gambia, 
		  Ghana, Greece, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, 
		  Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, 
		  Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, 
		  Lebanon, Lesotho, Libya, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Madagascar, 
		  Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, 
		  Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, 
		  New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, 
		  Panama, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea, 
		  Russia, Rwanda, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and 
		  the Grenadines, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, 
		  Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Somalia, South Africa, 
		  Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Syria, Tajikistan, Thailand, 
		  Timor-Leste, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Turkey, 
		  Uganda, United Arab Emirates, United Republic of Tanzania, Uruguay, 
		  Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. 
		  
		  Full List of Countries Who Voted to Give Palestine New UN Power (newsweek.com)  *** *** UN General Assembly presses Security Council 
		  to give ‘favorable consideration’ to full Palestinian membership UN News, 10 May 2024 The UN General Assembly convened again in New York on Friday for an 
		  emergency special session on the Gaza crisis and overwhelmingly passed 
		  a resolution which upgrades Palestine’s rights at the world body as an 
		  Observer State, without offering full membership. It urged the 
		  Security Council to give “favourable consideration” to Palestine’s 
		  request. What does the resolution mean? Here’s a quick recap of what this means: by adopting this 
		  resolution the General Assembly will upgrade the rights of the State 
		  of Palestine within the world body, but not the right to vote or put 
		  forward its candidature to such organs as the Security 
		  Council or the Economic and 
		  Social Council (ECOSOC). Granting Palestinian membership requires a recommendation from the 
		  Security Council. At the same time, the Assembly determines that the 
		  State of Palestine is qualified for such status and recommends that 
		  the Security Council “reconsider the matter favourably”. None of the upgrades in status will take effect until the new 
		  session of the Assembly opens on 10 September. Here are some of the changes in status that Palestine will have a 
		  right to later this year: To be seated among Member States in alphabetical order Make 
		  statements on behalf of a group Submit proposals and amendments and 
		  introduce them Co-sponsor proposals and amendments, including on 
		  behalf of a group Propose items to be included in the provisional 
		  agenda of the regular or special sessions and the right to request the 
		  inclusion of supplementary or additional items in the agenda of 
		  regular or special sessions The right of members of the delegation of 
		  the State of Palestine to be elected as officers in the plenary and 
		  the Main Committees of the General Assembly Full and effective 
		  participation in UN conferences and international conferences and 
		  meetings convened under the auspices of the General Assembly or, as 
		  appropriate, of other UN organs The meeting has adjourned for the day. Vice President Jörundur 
		  Valtýsson announced that the session will reconvene on Monday, 13 May, 
		  at 10 AM New York time. For a full summary of this and other major UN meetings, visit UN 
		  Meetings Coverage in English and French. Saudi Arabia: Re-establish the truth Saudi Arabian Ambassador Abdulaziz Alwasil recalled General 
		  Assembly resolutions adopted over the years that reaffirmed the rights 
		  of the Palestinian people, including their right to 
		  self-determination. “The resolution presented today is fully in line with those 
		  resolutions. It seeks to implement the will of the international 
		  community and contribute to building true peace in the Middle East 
		  based on the two-State solution,” he said. “It is high time for the international community to re-establish 
		  the truth because the world can no longer ignore the suffering of the 
		  Palestinian people that has lasted for decades,” he added. Ambassador Alwasil further noted Israel, the occupying power, has 
		  perpetrated “all sorts of crimes” against Palestinian people, scorning 
		  international law. “Israel is convinced that they are above these resolutions and that 
		  they enjoy a certain level of immunity…which explains their ongoing 
		  hostile and brutal policies,” he said. He highlighted the dire situation in Rafah, the last refuge for the 
		  Palestinian people which was also densely populated by those displaced 
		  from elsewhere and called he for a strong international position to 
		  put an end to the Israeli practices in Gaza. Concluding his statement, the Ambassador expressed Saudi Arabia’s 
		  commitment to supporting the right of Palestinian people to 
		  self-determination and to build their own independent State within the 
		  1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital, in line with relevant 
		  resolutions.  China: Resolution reflects the will of the international 
		  community Ambassador FU Cong of China said that Palestine should have the 
		  same status as Israel and that Palestinian people should enjoy the 
		  same rights as Israeli people. “It is the common responsibility of the international community to 
		  support and advance the process of Palestinian independent Statehood, 
		  and provide strong support for the implementation of the two-State 
		  solution and a lasting peace in the Middle East,” he said. He further noted that on the Palestinian-Israeli issue, the United 
		  States repeatedly used its veto “in an unjustified attempt” to 
		  obstruct the international community’s efforts to correct the 
		  “historical injustice long visited on Palestine”. “It is not commensurate with the role of a responsible major 
		  country,” he said. He also recalled the overwhelming support for the General Assembly 
		  resolution, adopted earlier in the day, reaffirming the right of 
		  Palestinian people to self-determination and recommending that the 
		  Security Council reconsider favourably its application to join the 
		  United Nations. “China welcomes this historic resolution, which reflects the will 
		  of the international community,” Ambassador Fu said. “We believe that the special modalities adopted within the limits 
		  permitted by the UN 
		  Charter will enable the international community to listen more 
		  adequately to the voice of Palestine and help it to talk and negotiate 
		  with Israel on a more equal footing.” Assembly President Francis resumed the meeting, with about 72 
		  speakers left to take the floor. The spokesperson for the General 
		  Assembly announced earlier in the day that due to the number of 
		  remaining speakers, the meeting will likely 
		  continue on Monday. With the last speaker for the morning having delivered their 
		  statement, the President of the General Assembly adjourned the 
		  meeting. It will reconvene at 3 PM New York time. Switzerland: Ceasefire urgently needed Swiss Ambassador Pascale Christine Baeriswyl explained that her 
		  country’s abstention from the vote was in line with its position at 
		  the Security Council last month. “We felt that in view of the great instability prevailing in the 
		  region, this stage was not conducive to improving the situation,” she 
		  said. “Without opposing it, we believe it would be preferable to consider 
		  admitting Palestine as a full member of the United Nations at time 
		  when such a step would insert itself in the logic of emerging peace,” 
		  she added, noting that such admission would have to follow the 
		  procedures enshrined in the UN Charter. She also voiced Switzerland’s firm support to the two-State 
		  solution, stating that only a negotiated solution in which two States 
		  – Israel and Palestine – live side by side in peace and security can 
		  lead to lasting peace. Ambassador Baeriswyl also voiced deep concern over the catastrophic 
		  situation of civilians in the ongoing conflict in Gaza, stating that 
		  it could worsen further in the event of a major Israeli military 
		  offensive in Rafa'h. “Such a prospect is unacceptable, and Switzerland reaffirms its 
		  opposition to such an operation,” she said, emphasising the need to 
		  ensure protection of humanitarians and respect for international 
		  humanitarian and human rights laws. In conclusion, she called for an immediate ceasefire. “Safety of civilians must be ensured. All hostages must be released 
		  immediately and unconditionally, and safe, rapid and unhindered access 
		  for humanitarian aid must be allowed via all crossing points.” Firmly committed to two-State solution: UK Barbara Woodward, Ambassador of the United Kingdom, said that her 
		  country remains “firmly committed” to the two-State solution that 
		  guarantees security and stability for both the Israeli and the 
		  Palestinian people. “We are abstaining from this resolution because we believe the 
		  first step towards achieving this goal is resolving the immediate 
		  crisis in Gaza,” she said, emphasising that the fastest way to end the 
		  conflict is “to secure a deal which gets the hostages out and allows 
		  for a pause in the fighting”. “We must then work together to turn that pause into a sustainable, 
		  permanent ceasefire.” She added that “setting out the horizon” for a Palestinian State 
		  should be one of the vital conditions from moving from a pause in 
		  fighting to a sustainable ceasefire. “Recognising a Palestinian State, including at the UN, should be 
		  part of that process,” she said. Ambassador Woodward also noted that the UK remains deeply concerned 
		  about the prospect of a major operation in Rafah and that it will not 
		  support such an act, unless there is a “very clear plan” on protecting 
		  civilians as well as their access to aid and medical care. “We have not seen that plan, so in these circumstances, we will not 
		  support a major operation in Rafah,” she said. France: High time for political solution French Ambassador Nicolas de Rivière said his country voted in 
		  favour of the resolution, noting also the clarifications provided in 
		  the text on the right to vote and the right to be elected, which are 
		  the prerogatives of Member States alone. “France recalls that the procedure for admitting a new Member State 
		  is defined by the UN Charter, and it must not be circumvented,” he 
		  said. He also noted that France is in favour of the admission of 
		  Palestine as a full member of the Organization, which is why it voted 
		  in favour at the Security Council last month. Reiterating his country’s condemnation of the terrorist attacks by 
		  Hamas and other groups on 7 October, Ambassador de Rivière stated 
		  France’s demand for a ceasefire and release of all hostages. “The offensive that has started in Rafah risks causing numerous 
		  victims and displacing people at a time where nowhere can be deemed 
		  safe today in Gaza. There is further risk of disrupting delivery of 
		  aid,” he said, expressing his country’s opposition to the military 
		  operation. “All parties must do everything they can to protect civilians and 
		  guarantee access for humanitarian aid. It is high time to mobilise for 
		  a political solution,” he added. Statehood must be negotiated: US Explaining the US’s negative vote, Ambassador Robert Wood said that 
		  it did not reflect opposition to Palestinian statehood. “We have been very clear that we support it and seek to advance it 
		  meaningfully. Instead, it is an acknowledgement that statehood will 
		  come from a process that involves direct negotiations between the 
		  parties,” he said. “There is no other path that guarantees Israel’s security and 
		  future as a democratic Jewish State. There is no other path that 
		  guarantees Palestinians can live in peace and dignity in a State of 
		  their own,” he added. He further expressed the US commitment to intensifying its 
		  engagement with Palestinians and the rest of the Middle East region to 
		  advance a political settlement that will create a path to Palestinian 
		  statehood and subsequent membership in the UN. “This resolution does not resolve the concerns about the 
		  Palestinian membership application raised in April in the Security 
		  Council…and should the  Security Council take up the Palestinian 
		  membership application as a result of this resolution, there will be a 
		  similar outcome,” he said. Draft resolution passed overwhelmingly The vote is in. It has passed overwhelmingly with 143 countries in 
		  favour, nine against and 25 abstaining. The Assembly just voted to pass the draft resolution as long as two 
		  thirds agree. Pakistan: Resolution vote will determine strong support Ambassador Munir Akram of Pakistan said there will come a day when 
		  Israel will be held accountable for the crimes committed against 
		  Palestinians, especially in Gaza. The insults hurled today are “the arrogance of the aggressor” 
		  reflecting the impunity of the occupier, he said, explaining his 
		  delegation's position ahead of the vote on the draft resolution. He also expressed hope that the international community will 
		  appropriately respond in that regard. The Ambassador underscored that the resolution’s adoption will 
		  determine the widespread support for Palestine to be accorded full UN 
		  membership. Russia: A moral duty The Assembly is now preparing to vote on the draft resolution. Before that, some countries are exercising their right to make 
		  statements before the vote, starting with Russia's Ambassador Vassily 
		  Nebenzia. He is criticising the US, saying that the resolution is complicated 
		  because it is attempting to advance Palestinian membership as far as 
		  possible without provoking another veto from Washington on full 
		  membership. He said Palestine deserves nothing less than full membership at the 
		  UN.  “It is the moral duty of everyone," he said. “Only full-fledged membership will allow Palestine to stand 
		  alongside other members of the Organization and enjoy the rights that 
		  this status implies.”  Israel: Extra benefits for Palestine would appease 
		  terrorists Israel’s Ambassador Gilad Erdan said that after Hitler’s rise to 
		  power, the Nazis had sought to annihilate the Jewish people and all 
		  those they deemed sub-human, but the forces of good fought to return 
		  peace to the world, and the UN was founded to ensure that such tyranny 
		  never raised its head again. “Today, you are doing the opposite…welcoming a terror State into 
		  its ranks,” he said.  “You have opened up the United Nations to modern-day Naziism. It 
		  makes me sick.” The terrorist group Hamas controls Gaza and has taken over areas of 
		  the West Bank, he said, holding up a poster showing Hamas’s leader, 
		  who he described as “a terrorist diplomat whose stated goal is Jewish 
		  genocide”. “Today, you have a choice between weakness and fighting terror,” he 
		  said, adding that the UN is appeasing “murderous dictators” and 
		  destroying the UN Charter. “This day will go down in infamy.” In closing, he held up a mini 
		  portable electric document shredder and inserted the cover of the UN 
		  Charter. Palestinian flag ‘flies high and proud’ Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of the observer State of 
		  Palestine, recounted the devastating impacts of the ongoing war in 
		  Gaza, with over 35,000 Palestinians killed, a further 80,000 injured 
		  and over two million displaced. “No words can capture what such loss and trauma signify for 
		  Palestinians, their families, their communities and for our nation as 
		  whole,” he said. He added that the Palestinians in Gaza have been pushed to the 
		  “very edge” of the Strip “to the very brink of life” with “bombs and 
		  bullets haunting them”. Mr. Mansour highlighted that despite the attacks and destruction, 
		  the flag of Palestine “flies high and proud” in Palestine and across 
		  the globe, becoming a “symbol raised by all those who believe in 
		  freedom and its just rule”. ‘Lives cannot be restored’ “It is true that we will not disappear, but the lives lost cannot 
		  be restored,” he stated. The Permanent Observer said people have to make a decision: stand 
		  by the right of a nation to live in freedom and dignity on its 
		  ancestral land, standing with peace and recognising the rights of 
		  Palestinians or they can stand on the sidelines of history. Mr. Mansour said after holding observer status for 50 years, “we 
		  wish from all those who invoke the UN Charter to abide by the right of 
		  the Palestinian people to self-determination guaranteed by the 
		  Charter.” “A ‘yes’ vote is a vote for Palestinian existence; it is not 
		  against any State, but it is against attempts to deprive us of our 
		  State,” he added, stating that it would be an investment in peace and 
		  empowering the forces of peace. Security Council must heed global call for Palestinian statehood: 
		  UAE On behalf of the Arab Group, Mohamed Issa Hamad Mohamed Abushahab, 
		  Permanent Representative of the United Arab Emirates to the UN, 
		  introduced the draft resolution, saying it recommends that the 
		  Security Council reconsider Palestine’s full UN membership 
		  application. “Today marks a defining moment,” he said. The State of Palestine has demonstrated that it deserves full 
		  membership in the international community by acceding to international 
		  treaties, adhering to the UN Charter and meeting requirements of 
		  statehood. In addition, more than 140 countries now recognise 
		  Palestine as a State, he said. Voting for the resolution amid the ongoing conflict would support 
		  the two-State solution to the crisis, he said, adding that the 
		  Security Council must respond to the will of the international 
		  community. After delivering his statement, the UAE Ambassador 
		  called on the Assembly to vote on the draft at 11:00 AM New York time. Members agreed to do so and would afterwards resume the debate. Middle East on course for ‘full-scale catastrophe’, warns Francis Mr. Francis said from the podium of the Assembly Hall that the 
		  Israel-Palestine crisis was the original crisis before the world body 
		  when it was founded in 1946. Peace has remained elusive, and today has become an untenable 
		  situation that is deteriorating "at an alarming speed", he told 
		  delegates. This is “bringing countless innocent victims into its deadly fold 
		  and pushing the region further to the brink of full-scale 
		  catastrophe”. He urged the international community to not look away from the dire 
		  situation that has unfolded since the  7 October terror attacks and 
		  the ensuing Israeli devastation of Gaza. End the scourge of war “Today, let us remember the legacy from which we hail. We stand 
		  proudly upon the shoulders of those who, many decades ago, recognised 
		  their ultimate responsibility to forge a peace that will banish 
		  the scourge and terror of war,” he urged. “I therefore call upon the membership to purposely assess the 
		  situation before us, with nothing else in mind but a commitment to 
		  peace as our utmost ambition,” he said. He called upon the parties to the conflict, supported by nations 
		  with leverage, to urgently come to an agreement on a ceasefire to 
		  bring to an end to the suffering of countless people and secure the 
		  release of all hostages. “We must believe in the essential goodness of others," he said, and 
		  “in the understanding that no problem of human relations is 
		  insoluble”, calling on them to help bring lasting peace, save lives 
		  and end the violence. He’s inviting the Assembly to recognise the fact that some members 
		  are in arrears with their mandatory contributions. If you don't pay 
		  up, you lose your vote. Those are the rules. But, there are exceptions 
		  that have been made, including today.  The President of the General Assembly Dennis Francis has just 
		  gavelled in the resumed session on the Gaza crisis.09:55 AM Aid operations have come to a standstill since the start of the 
		  military’s ground operation in Rafah this week, with an estimated 
		  100,000 Palestinians displaced once again in a highly fluid situation, 
		  according to humanitarians. Smoke rises above Rafah as bombardments continue.   
		  UNRWA The Assembly is also expected to vote on a draft resolution, 
		  co-sponsored by a group of countries, concerning the status 
		  of the observer State of Palestine at the United Nations. The draft resolution follows the veto cast by United States at the 
		  Security Council on 
		  18 April, which blocked Palestine’s admission as a full UN Member 
		  State. That draft resolution, submitted by non-permanent Council 
		  member Algeria, had received 12 votes in favour, with Switzerland and 
		  the United Kingdom abstaining. Draft resolution on Palestine The draft resolution expected to be put to a vote at the 193-member 
		  General Assembly, where no nations have veto power, would have the 
		  world body “recommend” that the Security Council reconsider the matter 
		  of Palestine’s membership favourably in line with Article 
		  4 of the UN Charter concerning membership and 
		  the advisory opinion issued 
		  by the International Court of 
		  Justice (ICJ) in 1948. A revised 
		  version of the draft resolution, as of Thursday evening in New 
		  York, also included an annex, which on an exceptional basis and 
		  without setting a precedent, lists significant changes to the State of 
		  Palestine’s status at General Assembly meetings and conferences, 
		  including its order in the list of speakers and seating arrangements. These would not just be of symbolic importance, but signal a shift 
		  in Palestine’s diplomatic heft within the entire UN system. That said, 
		  General Assembly will not grant Palestinian membership in the UN, 
		  since this requires a recommendation from the Security Council. No voting rights The draft resolution also notes that as an observer State, 
		  Palestine does not have the right to vote in the General Assembly or 
		  to put forward its candidature to UN organs such as the Security 
		  Council or the Economic and Social Council. If adopted, the resolution’s provisions would only apply from the 
		  start of the 79th session of the General Assembly, which gets underway 
		  in mid-September 2024. Draft resolutions do not represent the official position of the 
		  General Assembly until they are formally adopted. Once the resolution is voted on, the whole issue of Palestine’s 
		  status will return to the 15-member Security Council for further 
		  consideration, where any effort to attain full membership is likely to 
		  be blocked again by the United States, which holds veto power 
		  alongside the organ’s other permanent members – China, France, Russia 
		  and the United Kingdom. The majority of the General Assembly will have had their say, 
		  however, amid the continuing crisis. 10th Emergency Special Session The meeting is the continuation of the 10th Emergency Special 
		  Session (ESS), which 
		  last convened on 12 December 2023, against the backdrop of a 
		  worsening crisis in Gaza.   At that meeting in a resolution passed overwhelmingly, the Assembly 
		  demanded an immediate humanitarian ceasefire as well as the immediate 
		  and unconditional release of all hostages. The Assembly also decided to adjourn the session temporarily and 
		  authorised the President of the General Assembly to resume its meeting 
		  upon request from Member States. The 10th ESS convened for the first time in April 1997 following a 
		  request from Qatar. It followed a series of Security Council and 
		  General Assembly meetings regarding the Israeli decision to build a 
		  large housing project in an area of East Jerusalem. 
		  UN General 
		  Assembly presses Security Council to give ‘favourable consideration’ 
		  to full Palestinian membership | UN News  *** 
		  *** Palestine’s status at the UN explained 18 April 2024 UN Affairs What will it take for Palestine to become a full UN Member State? 
		  As the Security Council takes up the matter while the devastating war 
		  in Gaza enters its seventh month, we looked at Palestine’s current 
		  status and what it takes to become a UN Member State. Palestine’s current status Right now, Palestine is a “Permanent Observer State” at the UN, 
		  enjoying the status that allows it to participate in all of the 
		  Organization’s proceedings, except for voting on draft resolutions and 
		  decisions in its main organs and bodies, from the Security 
		  Council to the General Assembly and its six main committees. However, some other participation is off-limits to Permanent 
		  Observers. This was made clear by a General 
		  Assembly resolution, which temporarily, for the year 2019 during 
		  which Palestine served as chair of the Group of 77 developing 
		  countries and China (G77), accorded to Palestine additional rights: to 
		  submit proposals and amendments and introduce them, to exercise a 
		  right of reply and to raise procedural motions, including points of 
		  order and requests to put proposals to the vote. These rights 
		  temporarily accorded to Palestine then expired as of 2020. On 2 April 2024, Palestine sent the UN Secretary-General a letter 
		  requesting renewed consideration be given to the application of 
		  Palestine for admission to membership in the UN, a request originally 
		  submitted in 2011. Upon receipt of the request, the UN chief forwarded 
		  it to the Security Council, which on 8 April took up the matter in an 
		  open meeting. The process is a continuation of what happened in September 2011, 
		  when the Palestinian President sent a letter with 
		  the application request for UN membership to the UN chief, who 
		  promptly sent 
		  the application to the Security Council and the General Assembly. 
		  In accordance with the Council’s provisional rules of procedure, the 
		  Security Council referred the matter to its Committee on Admission of 
		  New Members, where members deliberated but were not unanimous on 
		  approving the request. UN Photo/Evan Schneider   Riyad Mansour, Permanent 
		  Observer of Palestine to the UN, (left) talks with a participant at a 
		  special meeting held in observance of the International Day of 
		  Solidarity with the Palestinian People. (file) How UN Member States are born Agreement between the UN General Assembly and the Security Council 
		  is needed to admit 
		  any new Member States. Any application for UN membership comes to the UN Secretary-General 
		  and then is forwarded to the Security Council and the General 
		  Assembly. The 15-member organ decides whether or not to recommend the 
		  admission to the 193-member General Assembly after its Committee on 
		  Admission of New Members deliberates on the matter. The process is outlined in the UN 
		  Charter, whereby UN membership “is open to all other peace-loving 
		  States which accept the obligations contained in the present Charter” 
		  and “are able and willing to carry out these obligations”. The Council can vote on the proposal and must have at least nine 
		  members in favour and none of its permanent members – China, France, 
		  Russia, United Kingdom, United States – using their veto power. Committee of Admission of New Members As per rule 59 of its provisional rules of procedure, the Security 
		  Council referred the matter to its Committee 
		  of the Admission of New Members. The Committee met twice, on 8 and 
		  11 April 2024. In 2011, Committee members considered Palestine’s request at 
		  meetings held over two months, but could not unanimously advise the 
		  Council to approve the application, with some members in favour, 
		  others noting that an abstention was envisaged in the event of a vote 
		  and several suggesting other options, including that as an 
		  intermediate step, “the General Assembly should adopt a resolution by 
		  which Palestine would be made an Observer State,” according to the 
		  Committee report. Learn more about the Committee’s history of decisions here. UN Photo/Albert Fox   Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe 
		  Sharette (left) is congratulated by Haiti’s representative Stephen 
		  Alexis in the General Assembly after Israel’s admission in 1949 as the 
		  UN’s 59th Member State. (file) World body holds a vote After receiving the Council’s positive recommendation, the General 
		  Assembly plays its role. In cases of approvals – like with Israel in 
		  1948 and dozens of others, including South 
		  Sudan, in 2011, the newest UN Member State – the Assembly is 
		  tasked with drafting a resolution. Shortly after receiving a Council recommendation, the General 
		  Assembly holds a vote on the matter, with all 193 Member States 
		  joining in the process. Granting full membership status In admitting 
		  more than 100 Member States since the founding of the UN in 1945, 
		  the General Assembly needs a two thirds majority in a vote to admit a 
		  new member. Once a resolution is adopted, the new member is officially admitted 
		  to the UN. Membership entails participating in UN meetings, paying annual dues 
		  and voting on all issues that come before the Organisation. The new 
		  member’s flag is then added to the row of members that stretch across 
		  the front of UN Headquarters in New York and other main UN offices 
		  around the world. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas   A view of the General Assembly 
		  Hall as Mahmoud Abbas (shown on screens), President of the Palestinian 
		  Authority, addresses the Assembly before the vote on its status in 
		  2012. (file) Non-member Permanent Observer status In the case of Palestine, one year later in 2012, the General 
		  Assembly decided 
		  to recognise it as a “non-member Permanent Observer State”. While the only other current non-member Observer State is the Holy 
		  See, representing the Vatican, the practice of according the status 
		  dates from 1946, when the Secretary-General accepted the designation 
		  of the Swiss Government as a Permanent Observer to the United Nations. 
		  Observers were subsequently put forward by certain States that later 
		  became UN Member States, including Austria, Finland, Italy and Japan. As a Permanent Observer State, Palestine’s flag does fly outside 
		  the UN Secretariat building in New York, although it is slightly 
		  separated from the UN Member State flags and is not part of the 
		  alphabetic line-up. UN Photo/Jean Marc Ferré   The flag of the State of 
		  Palestine is raised at the United Nations in Geneva. (file) How Palestine became a non-member Observer State On 29 November 2012, the General Assembly adopted a resolution granting 
		  to Palestine the status of non-member observer State in the United 
		  Nations, with a vote of 
		  138 for, nine against (Canada, Czech Republic, Federated States of 
		  Micronesia, Israel, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Panama, Palau, United 
		  States), with 41 abstentions. Until 2012, Palestine had observer status in the UN General 
		  Assembly, but not as a State. The vote came on the same day that the UN observed the annual International 
		  Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. Established in 
		  1977, the Day marks the date in 1947 when the Assembly adopted a resolution partitioning 
		  then-mandated Palestine into two States, one Jewish and one Arab. Upon the adoption in 2012, Mahmoud Abbas, President of the 
		  Palestinian Authority, said its aim in coming before the world body to 
		  change its status was to try to “breathe new life” into the peace 
		  process. 
		  Palestine’s 
		  status at the UN explained | UN News  
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