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News ID: 110473
Publish Date : 23 December 2022 - 22:32

Chile Plans to Open Embassy in Palestine

WEST BANK (Al Jazeera) – The Palestinian foreign ministry has welcomed Chile’s plans to open an embassy in the occupied territories, a move that Chilean President Gabriel Boric said will signal a demand that “international law be respected”.
Chile’s foreign minister, Antonia Urrejola, confirmed the plan on Thursday.
Boric, a left-wing politician and former student activist who took office in March, had announced the decision on Wednesday evening during a private ceremony in the Chilean capital, Santiago, hosted by the city’s large Palestinian community.
“I am taking a risk [saying] this,” he said at the ceremony. “We are going to raise our official representation in Palestine from having a charge d’affaires. Now we are going to open an embassy.”
The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates “strongly commended the move”, the official Palestinian news agency WAFA reported on Thursday.
The decision, the ministry said, “affirms the principled position of Chile and its president in support of international law and the right of the Palestinian people to establish their independent state”.
Chile’s Palestinian community is estimated to include more than 300,000 people, many of whom come from families originally from the Bethlehem area of the West Bank, including the villages of Beit Jala and Beit Sahour.
In 1998, Chile opened a representative office to the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank city of Ramallah. And in 2011, the country also recognized Palestine as a state and supported its entrance into UNESCO.
On Wednesday, Boric said the proposed embassy in the occupied Palestinian territories also was meant to give Palestinians the representation they deserve. He did not specify where exactly the embassy would be located.
Since the 1967 “Six-Day War”, the Zionist regime has occupied the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Al-Quds, which the Palestinian Authority wants as the capital of a future Palestinian state.
The Zionist regime later unilaterally annexed East Al-Quds in a move that remains unrecognized by the international community.
Against that backdrop, the location of embassies and other diplomatic posts remains contentious.
In 2017, then-United States President Donald Trump drew the ire of Palestinians when he recognized the regime’s claim to an “undivided” Al-Quds and, a year later, moved the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to the holy city.