Hope of Palestine state fading
A renewed Palestinian bid to seek upgraded UN status may be aimed at saving the "two-state solution" but many believe the idea of an independent Palestine alongside Israel is looking increasingly unrealistic.
"The two-state solution is the only sustainable option. Yet the door may be closing for good," UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned last month just days before Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas launched a fresh bid for upgraded status at the United Nations.
"We have reached a critical point," senior Palestinian official Hanan Ashrawi recently told reporters in Ramallah.
"Israel has been allowed to undermine the two-state solution to the point where this is a last-ditch effort to try to rescue the chances of peace and the two-state solution by the Palestinians," she said.
With the peace process deadlocked for more than two years, the concept of the one-state solution -- a bi-national entity on land encompassing Israel and the Palestinian territories -- is gaining ground.
In recent months, the idea has become a hot topic of discussion across the Palestinian territories, its merits and shortcomings taking up an increasing number of column inches in the local and international press.
A survey published in May by JMCC, a Jerusalem-based Palestinian research centre, showed that one in four Palestinians -- or 25.9 percent -- were in favour of a bi-national state, compared with 22.3 percent six months earlier.
And a more recent joint Israeli-Palestinian survey conducted last month found that 30 percent of Palestinians and 31 percent of Israelis would support a one-state solution in which Jews and Arabs enjoy equality.
"Creating two neighbouring states for two peoples that respect one another would be the best solution," wrote Israel's former parliament speaker Avraham Burg in the New York Times.
"However, if our shortsighted leaders miss this opportunity, the same fair and equal principles should be applied to one state for both peoples," said Burg, a longtime proponent of the idea.
The concept of a bi-national state is not new.
Until the 1980s, the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) campaigned for a "democratic" Palestinian state on the territory that comprised mandatory Palestine prior to the establishment of the Jewish state in 1948.
When Israel and the Palestinians signed the 1993 Oslo Accords, there were 193,000 settlers living in the territories. That number now stands at more than 310,000 and the number is growing.
Another 200,000 or so live in a dozen settlement neighbourhoods in east Jerusalem, which was captured by Israel in 1967 and annexed in a move never recognised by the international community.
PLO statistics show that since Abbas's historic bid to seek full UN state membership in September 2011, the number of settlers has risen by more than 20,000.
"The only ethical solution is a (single) democratic, secular and civic state in historic Palestine," says Omar Barghouti, founder member of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign, which is modelled on the South Africa's fight against apartheid.
"There is no such a thing as a one-state solution," negotiator Saeb Erakat said last month.
"There is a one-state reality being created by the Israeli actions of settlements, dictations, facts on the ground, and with that comes apartheid."
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