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kaggle-ho-024621House Oversight

UN Resolutions on Palestinian Statehood and PLO Recognition

UN Resolutions on Palestinian Statehood and PLO Recognition The passage merely recounts historical UN resolutions and general facts about Palestinian population and statehood without naming current high‑level officials, financial transactions, or actionable leads. It offers no concrete evidence, dates, or relationships that could be pursued by investigators. Key insights: Mentions UNGA resolutions 3236, 3237 (1974) and 1988 recognition of Palestine.; Notes the PLO’s status as UN observer and its claim to represent Palestinians.; References the Oslo Accords and a proposed UN resolution 377 (1950) for 1967 borders.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-024621
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Summary

UN Resolutions on Palestinian Statehood and PLO Recognition The passage merely recounts historical UN resolutions and general facts about Palestinian population and statehood without naming current high‑level officials, financial transactions, or actionable leads. It offers no concrete evidence, dates, or relationships that could be pursued by investigators. Key insights: Mentions UNGA resolutions 3236, 3237 (1974) and 1988 recognition of Palestine.; Notes the PLO’s status as UN observer and its claim to represent Palestinians.; References the Oslo Accords and a proposed UN resolution 377 (1950) for 1967 borders.

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kagglehouse-oversightunpalestineplostatehoodinternational-law

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
30 organizations. At present, there are 10.5 million Palestinians, including around 5 millions refugees, scattered in several Middle Eastern countries and other Diaspora states. As for Palestinian Statehood: The UN General Assembly by great majority has recognized the right of the Palestinian people to self determination and statehood in more than 40 resolutions. Most famous of these resolutions were the two issued in October, 1974: 3236 and 3237. The latter recognized the PLO as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and stipulated that it would be granted the status of Observer in all UN organs and affiliated organizations and its sponsored conferences. In December 15, 1988, a month after the declaration of the State of Palestine by the PLO conference in Algiers, the UN General Assembly decided in its resolution of December 15, 1988 to recognize the PLO declaration of the State of Palestine and to substitute the use of PLO for the name of Palestine in all its organs and conferences. UN membership After the Oslo accords in 1993 and the failure of peace negotiations which lasted for 18 years, the PLO intends to bring to the UN General Assembly once again, through the UN Resolution number 377 of 1950, the issue of recognition of the State of Palestine on the basis of the June, 1967 borders. Such resolutions, if issued by the UN General Assembly, could have some legal, political and media ramifications, but, nevertheless, it will not have any practical impact on the Israeli Government and some of its allies. The State of Palestine will still lack a major element of a sovereign state: That is the "effective control" over territory and population. This can only be achieved when the Israeli occupation is compelled

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