This
International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People comes at a time
when Palestinians continue to suffer the indignities and violence of occupation
and conflict, but also at a time when a new beginning has been made in efforts
to achieve a two State solution to the conflict.
Two days ago in
Annapolis, President Abbas and Prime Minister Olmert, meeting under the
auspices of President Bush and before a wide cross-section of the international
community, including members of the Arab League, agreed to launch negotiations
on all core issues without exception, in order to conclude a peace treaty
resolving all outstanding issues. They pledged to make every effort to do this
in 2008.
Implementation is now paramount. What we do tomorrow is
more important than what we say today. In Annapolis, I
pledged the full support of the United Nations for the renewed effort. I
stressed that for 60 years, the Organization has provided the broad parameters
for peace, first in the partition plan, and then in Security Council
resolutions 242, 338, 1397 and 1515, and that today, the UN has few higher
priorities than seeing this conflict resolved.
We all know the reasons why. The Palestinians have been deprived of
their inalienable right to self-determination for 60 years. Palestinian society
has been increasingly fragmented - territorially, by settlements, land
expropriation and the barrier in the occupied Palestinian territory; socially
and economically, by closure; and politically, between Gaza
and the West Bank. They have begun to fear
that the dream of statehood may slip beyond their grasp. This growing sense of
despair must be reversed.
The process
launched at Annapolis
must change the lives of Palestinians, and secure their independence and
freedom. The process must end the occupation and create an independent and
viable State of Palestine, at peace with itself and its neighbours. It also
must deliver on the vital interests of Israelis: a Palestinian State
that is a true partner and not a source of terrorism, secure and recognized
borders, and a permanent end to the conflict.
We cannot close
our eyes to the profound doubt and mistrust on either side about the will and
capacity of the other to achieve these goals. Despite several diplomatic
landmarks, conditions on the ground have become harder, not easier, for most
Palestinians, and for many Israelis too. Israel faces genuine security
threats, and Israeli civilians have died and been wounded in rocket attacks.
Palestinian civilians have been killed and injured in Israeli military
operations. The Gaza Strip has been almost entirely closed, with tight
restrictions on supplies and movements of people, leading to a grave
humanitarian situation. Settlements have expanded throughout the West Bank. Checkpoints and a barrier have been erected on
occupied land. Unemployment and poverty are rising.
The indignities,
injustices, and fear on both sides make it difficult to build faith in the
political process. But that is exactly what we have to do. We must abandon
piecemeal approaches, and address all aspects of the conflict.
Final status
negotiations need to begin in earnest, and address all the issues: Jerusalem, refugees,
borders, settlements, security and water. The broad outlines of solutions to
these issues are clear.
We must also help
the Palestinian Authority to rebuild, reform and perform. I hope a wide range
of donors will step forward with political and financial support at the
upcoming Paris
conference and beyond.
The situation on
the ground must also improve, rapidly and visibly. Without implementing
long-standing commitments under the Road Map and the Agreement on Movement and
Access, the diplomatic process cannot succeed. Progress requires parallel
actions and clear monitoring.
If peace is
built on hope not despair, we must also reach out to the people of Gaza. They have suffered
more than anyone else from conflict and poverty. Humanitarian aid is vital, and
UN efforts need the support of donors. But such aid is no substitute for a
functioning economy. The time has come for concrete initiatives to ease their
suffering. The unity of Gaza and the West Bank under the legitimate Palestinian Authority will
also have to be restored for a peace agreement to be sustainable.
The vision of an
end of occupation, an end of conflict, and two States living side-by-side in
peace is a vision of justice, security, and peace. It is still achievable. But
it will only happen if all involved take responsibility for contributing what
they can. Now that the Palestinian leadership has embarked on a new quest with
Israel to end the conflict and secure a better future for their children, let
us show our solidarity with the Palestinian people - and the Israeli people too
- by giving our unyielding support to their efforts, and not resting until the
goal is achieved.