Government sources not permitted to speak publicly said Australia was considering switching from its voting record on some issues,in line with Foreign Minister Penny Wong’s view that it was important for the international community to create momentum towards a two-state solution.
The move will anger Israel but again please Palestinian advocates in Australia,who have welcomed several recent Australian votes at the UN.
Diplomatic relations between Australia and Israel have been tested by the former’s voting on UN resolutions over the past year,as well as Australia’s refusal two weeks ago to condemn the arrest warrant issued bythe International Criminal Court for Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the decision by Home Affairs to deny entry to aformer Israeli minister on character grounds.
One of the draft resolutions under discussion at the UN demanded that Israel “bring an end to its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,as rapidly as possible,to cease immediately all new settlement activities and to evacuate all settlers from the Occupied Palestinian Territory”.
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The seven-page resolution,titled Peaceful settlement of the question of Palestine,also stresses “the need to urgently exert collective efforts to launch credible negotiations on all final status issues in the Middle East peace process”.
An annex to the resolution calls for a high-level international conference to be held next June in New York.