The UN Security Council has rejected a Palestinian resolution calling for peace with Israel within a year and an end to Israel's occupation by 2017.
The resolution failed to muster the minimum nine "yes" votes required in the council for adoption.
YES
Jordan China France Russia Luxembourg Chad Chile Argentina
NO
United States Australia
ABSTAIN
United Kingdom Lithuania Nigeria South Korea Rwanda
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It received eight "yes" votes, two "no" votes from the United States and Australia, and five abstentions, from the UK, Lithuania, Nigeria, South Korea and Rwanda.
Riyad Mansour, Palestinian ambassador to the UN, criticised the world body for the failure of the vote.
"The Security Council has once again failed to uphold its charter duties to address this crises and to meaningfully contribute to a lasting solution in accordance with its own resolutions," Mansour said.
"This year, our people under Israeli occupation endured the further theft and colonisation of their land, the demoliting of their homes, daily military raids, arrests and detention of thousands of civilians including children, rampant settler terrorism, constant affronts to thdeir human dignity and repeated incursions at our holiest sites," he added.
The US, Israel's closest ally, had reiterated its opposition to the draft resolution. Samantha Power, the US Ambassador to the UN, said the resolution undermined efforts to "achieve two states for two people."
"It is deeply imbalanced and contains many elements that are not conducive to negotiations between the parties including unconstructive deadlines that take no account for Israelis legitimate security concerns," she said.
The resolution had called for occupied East Jerusalem to be the capital of Palestine, an end to Israeli settlement building and settling the issue of Palestinian prisoner releases.
The resolution also called for negotiations to be based on territorial lines that existed before Israel captured the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in 1967.
Israel had said the Security Council vote, following the collapse in April of US-brokered talks on Palestinian statehood, would deepen the conflict.
Ali Abunimah, co-founder of the Electronic Intifada, derided the resolution, telling Al Jazeera it undermined Palestinian rights, including the rights of refugees and the future of Jerusalem.
"This was a terrible resolution which was unaninimously opposed by every major Palestinian faction, it contained so many compromises in an attempt to avoid a US veto that it was weaker than existing UN resolutions," he said.
The Palestinians, frustrated by the lack of progress on peace talks, have sought to internationalise the issue by seeking UN membership and recognition of statehood via membership in international organisations.
Several European parliaments have adopted non-binding motions calling for recognition of Palestine.
The Palestinians had warned that if the bid to win support for a UN resolution failed they were prepared to join the International Criminal Court to file suits against Israel.
498
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