The mission said on Thursday that it had begun circulating the resolution among UN members and were discussing the text with a number of Arab countries.
The Palestinians refused to provide any details of the text,
but said the Security Council has unanimously agreed that Israeli settlements
are illegal, Press TV reported.
Israel’s Haaretz daily said the proposal distributed by the
Palestinians resembles the February 2011 resolution on the same topic, which
was torpedoed by the US.
That document called for the condemnation of Israel’s
"illegal" settlements as well as an immediate halt in the regime’s
construction activities in the occupied Palestinian lands.
The draft gathered an overwhelming support of 14 out of the
Security Council’s 15 members.
Haaretz cited diplomatic sources as saying that the new
draft resolution includes a clause condemning Israeli settler violence against
Palestinians.
Senior officials of the Palestinian Authority have already
approached council member states to gauge potential support, including France,
Spain and Egypt.
Sources say Israel fears US President Barack Obama may no
longer wish to veto the resolution calling for end to settlement construction.
The Haaretz report also said the Palestinians want the
15-member council to vote on the resolution when Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas visits New York on April 22.
The proposal has angered Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who accused Abbas of undermining the so-called peace efforts.
All Israeli settlements are illegal under international
regulations. The regime is under fire even by its own allies for its land grab
polices.
The Israeli NGO, Peace Now, which tracks and opposes the
expansion of illegal settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, says
Israel began building 1,800 new settler units in the occupied West Bank in 2015.
On March 17, the European Union censured the Israeli regime
for its plans to expropriate Palestinian lands in the West Bank, saying the
decision risks threatening the chances of ending the conflict in the occupied
territories and creation of a future independent Palestinian state.
Britain has also slammed Israel’s decision to further expand
settlements in the West Bank, calling the move "an obstacle to peace.”
More than half a million Israelis live in over 230 illegal
settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories
in the West Bank and East al-Quds (Jerusalem).
Meanwhile, new reports say Tel Aviv has resumed construction
work on a section of its Apartheid Wall separating parts of the West Bank from
the bulk of the occupied territory.
Tel Aviv said it wanted to prevent Palestinians from
infiltrating into the Israeli settlements, but Palestinians consider the move
as yet another violation of their rights.
The wall’s presence in the occupied Palestinian territories
has been condemned by the United Nations and the International Court of
Justice.
Israel ups demolition of Palestinian structures
Recent figures released by the United Nations show the
Israeli military has more than tripled the demolitions of Palestinian structures
in the occupied West Bank over the past three months.
Figures collated by the UN’s office for the coordination of
humanitarian affairs (OCHA) said the average Israeli demolitions have risen to
165 on a monthly basis since January. The data further showed there 235 of such
cases in February alone, up from an average of 50 demolitions a month in
2012-2015.
Houses, Bedouin tents, livestock pens, outhouses and schools
have been among the structures destroyed by the Tel Aviv regime. The
demolitions also include humanitarian structures erected by the European Union
(EU) to help those affected by earlier such destruction.
The demolitions have raised alarm among diplomats and human
rights groups over what they regard as the Tel Aviv regime’s continued
violation of international law.
Catherine Cook, an OCHA official based in al-Quds
(Jerusalem) who monitors the demolitions, has described the situation as the
worst since the UN body started collecting figures in 2009.
"It is a very marked and worrying increase,” Catherine said,
adding, "The hardest hit are Bedouin and Palestinian farming communities who
are at risk of forcible transfer, which is a clear violation of international
law.”
On Thursday, Israeli military forces demolished a number of
Palestinian structures across the occupied territories. They also razed a car
spray painting workshop in the central West Bank town of Ni’lin, located 17
kilometers (11 miles) west of Ramallah, leaving some 15 Palestinians working
there jobless.
Meanwhile, Ghassan Daghlas, Palestinian official monitoring
settlement activities in the northern part of the West Bank, has said the
Israeli forces have destroyed more than 500 Palestinian structures since the
beginning of the current year.