World
        

Politics

Abbas to stop anti-Israeli-settlement resolution

Updated: 2011-02-14 20:40

(Xinhua)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

RAMALLAH - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is under big US pressure to cancel an Arab-Palestinian draft resolution against the construction of Israeli settlements in the occupied territories, a senior official from Abbas' Fatah party said Monday.

Related readings:
Abbas to stop anti-Israeli-settlement resolution Settlement stalls talks
Abbas to stop anti-Israeli-settlement resolution Palestinian, Russian leaders urge settlement freeze to resume negotiations
Abbas to stop anti-Israeli-settlement resolution US writing assurances for Israel to resume talks
Abbas to stop anti-Israeli-settlement resolution 
Obama lauds Israel's settlement freeze proposal

Azzam al-Ahmad, a member of Fatah's Central Committee, said " some more international sides" are putting pressure on Abbas to stop the draft resolution which would be presented before the UN Security Council.

On Sunday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton phoned Abbas. Al-Ahmad said the phone conversation was meant to exert more pressure on Abbas.

However, al-Ahmad said the Palestinians are determined to go ahead and put the draft resolution before the UN Security Council. It calls on Israel to cease settlement building in the West Bank and East Jerusalem immediately and condemns the construction.

The Palestinians decided to go to the UN after Israel resumed the construction in the West Bank in September. The Palestinians walked out of the U.S.-brokered peace talks, which were launched in that month, to protest the resumption of building.

Meanwhile, resigned Palestinian Foreign Affairs Minister Reyad al-Malki said that he expects the UN Security Council to convene by the end of this week. However, he said there were fears that Washington will influence UN member states to block the draft resolution.

E-paper

Ear We Go

China and the world set to embrace the merciful, peaceful year of rabbit

Preview of the coming issue
Carrefour finds the going tough in China
Maid to Order

European Edition

Specials

Mysteries written in blood

Historical records and Caucasian features of locals suggest link with Roman Empire.

Winning Charm

Coastal Yantai banks on little things that matter to grow

New rules to hit property market

The State Council launched a new round of measures to rein in property prices.

Top 10 of 2010
China Daily in Europe
The Confucius connection