November 30, 2012 | Posted by admin

Palestinians wave palestinian flags as they watch the U.N. General Assembly vote. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories: Embracing and shooting guns and fireworks into the air, Palestinians celebrated the UN General Assembly’s decision on Thursday to upgrade them to a non-member observer state.
As members of the body cast their vote, there was silence in Yasser Arafat square in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where large screens were set up to broadcast the session.
But the quiet was shattered by cheers and shouts of “God is greatest” when the tally was announced, the bid for the status upgrade approved by 138-9.
Fireworks were launched, and a few of those celebrating even fired guns into the air as music rang out in the city center.
“I’m happy they declared the state even though it’s only a moral victory. There are a lot of sharks out there, but it feels good,” 39-year-old Rashid Al-Kor told AFP.
Nearby, Palestinian-American Laila Jaman was waving a handful of Palestinian flags and carrying a picture of US President Barack Obama and Palestinan president Mahmud Abbas.
“I feel so good, I cannot describe my feelings, it’s as if we reached the end of a dark tunnel. With a Palestinian state we are now united as a people and a leadership,” she said breathlessly.
Ethar Al-Asmar, a teacher, was pragmatic about the approval.
“Israel isn’t going anywhere,” she said. But she said the moment felt historic nonetheless.
“We have been waiting for this for so long. I never thought this day would come.”
Earlier, the crowd listened intently as Abbas addressed the body, urging its members to approve the bid. There was raucous applause at the beginning and end of the speech.
Bassam Rabah was sheltering from the cold inside, watching a live feed from the United Nations on television.
“I don’t usually stay up late,” he told AFP. “But tonight I’m staying up late to see the Palestinian vote because I want to see who is with us and who is against us.”
The celebrations capped a day of festivities and activities in support of the bid, beginning with lunchtime rallies across the West Bank and Gaza.
Bothaina Hamdan was at the midday rally in Ramallah, where she said the bid would prove the Palestinians were committed to a peaceful resolution to the conflict.
“It won’t be easy to change anything on the ground; the occupation won’t end tomorrow, we know that,” she said. “But here today we are telling the world that we want peace, and we support peaceful methods to achieve our state.”
Ihab Yassin, also at the rally with his children — eight-year-old Tala and six-year-old Kamal — said the bid was a step in the right direction.
“In the long run, we will be a real state… That is important for the generations in the future,” he said. “My children will live in a Palestinian state.”
In Gaza City, around a thousand people marched toward the UN headquarters in support of the bid, waving flags of various Palestinian factions, including Fatah.,
Gaza’s ruling Hamas movement, a bitter rival of Fatah, has in recent days expressed tepid support for the UN bid, after its leadership-in-exile announced its backing.
But while the government allowed the rally to go ahead, there were no green Hamas flags to be seen among those participating, an AFP reporter said.
In the northern West Bank city of Nablus, several thousand people took part in the day-time festivities.
“It’s a good move, but it should be followed by national reconciliation or otherwise it will be nothing more than a leaf in the air,” said 39-year-old Asaad Abu Sabea, a driver.
Abbas has said publicly that he hopes to restart reconciliation talks between Fatah and Hamas after the UN bid, and in several cities members of a range of factions — including Hamas and Islamic Jihad — spoke in favor of the UN bid.
The request was front-page news, with the Al-Hayat Al-Jadida daily splashing page one with the headline: “The state of Palestine… tonight.”
But there were also voices of skepticism.
“These people are here to dance and drum and sing, but what for?” said 34-year-old Mitri Dbeet as he watched the Ramallah gathering from outside his shop.
“It’s not that I oppose the bid, but I just know it won’t do anything. It won’t help Gaza; it’s totally symbolic. But, I suppose, why not?“

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