By Philip Pullella | Reuters – Fri, Nov 30, 2012
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The Vatican hailed the United Nations' implicit recognition of a Palestinian state on Thursday and called for an internationally guaranteed special status for Jerusalem, something bound to irritate Israel.
The 193-nation U.N.
General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution to upgrade the
Palestinian Authority's observer status at the United Nations from
"entity" to "non-member state," the same status as the Vatican.
"The Holy See
welcomes with favor the decision of the General Assembly by which
Palestine has become a Non-member Observer State of the United Nations,"
a statement said.
But it also said it
was a "propitious occasion" to recall a "common position" on Jerusalem
expressed by the Vatican and the Palestine Liberation Organisation when the two sides signed a basic agreement on their bilateral relations in 2000.
Thursday's
statement called for "an internationally guaranteed special statute" for
Jerusalem, aimed at "safeguarding the freedom of religion and of
conscience, the identity and sacred character of Jerusalem as a Holy
City, (and) respect for, and freedom of, access to its holy places."
The Vatican's
re-stating of its position on Jerusalem, which has remained mostly
dormant for years, was bound to irk Israel, which says there is no need
for an international status for Jerusalem because those guarantees
already exist.
Israel declared Jerusalem its "united and eternal" capital in 1980 after annexing East Jerusalem in the Six Day War in 1967. World powers have not recognized the annexation.
Israel has always resisted the concept of any form of international mandate over Jerusalem.
It has been some time since the Vatican re-stated its position on the city so forcefully, and Thursday's statement was bound to be received negatively by Israel, a diplomat with direct knowledge of their relations said.
Israel has always maintained that it already guarantees the city's special nature as sacred to the three great monotheistic religions - Christianity, Judaism and Islam.
Thursday's statement called on both sides to seek an "effective commitment to building peace and stability, in justice and in the respect for legitimate aspirations, both of the Israelis and of the Palestinians."
The Vatican
and Israel established full diplomatic relations in 1994. Both Pope
John Paul II and Pope Benedict visited the Jewish state and Palestinian
territories.
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