India has remained “steadfast” in its support for Palestinian rights and has consistently voted in favour of Palestine at the United Nations on “15 key resolutions” said members of a key UN body, who called for New Delhi to play an “enhanced” role in the search for a solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict . Participants in a four-member delegation of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable rights of the Palestinian People said that during their discussions with External Affairs minister S. Jaishankar, the government had reiterated its traditional stand on the issue.
“We would like countries like
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When asked about India’s recent votes that appeared to support Israel, including one at the UN’s ECOSOC in June 2019 which ended the consultative status for a Palestinian NGO that Israel claimed had terror links, the committee members said those actions were not reflective of India’s stand on the resolution of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
They pointed to several other votes by India, including the UN General Assembly vote that had sharply criticised the United States for recognising Jerusalem as the Israeli capital in December 2017. India had also voted in favour of another UNGA resolution “deploring the use of excessive, disproportionate and indiscriminate force by Israeli forces against Palestinian civilians” in June 2018.
“The best way to test India’s commitment is the way India votes,” Mr. Niang told
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The delegation, which included Mr. Niang, a UN representative from Senegal, committee members from Indonesia and Malaysia, and a diplomat-observer from the State of Palestine Majed Bamya, said that they had spoken to the government about enhancing India’s political and diplomatic support to talks, as well as development aid and cooperation for institution building in Palestine. In particular, they discussed the recent election campaign in Israel, where PM Benjamin Netanyahu focused on increasing Jewish settlements in Palestinian territories, as well as on the “Deal of the century” proposed by the U.S. President for the “Middle East”, which favours Israeli demands on division of the land.
“It is in India’s national interests to abide by the support [to the Palestinian cause] it has been steadfast on, despite Israeli claims to the contrary,” Mr. Bamya said. “Peace based on two-state solution is much needed in the face of international proposals that are in breach of these principles, and cannot be forged between Israel and a third country [U.S.], but can only come from Israel-Palestine talks, which India also supports,” he added.