Palestine National Council
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Jordan
- In Jordan: From 1973 to the intifada
…Hussein, in 1984, allowed the Palestine National Council (a virtual parliament of the Palestinians) to meet in Amman. In February 1985 he signed an agreement with Arafat pledging cooperation with the PLO and coordination of a joint peace initiative. Hussein believed that Arafat would accept a confederation of the West…
Read More - In Jordan: Renouncing claims to the West Bank
When the Palestine National Council recognized the PLO as the sole legal representative of the Palestinian people and proclaimed the independence of a purely notional Palestine on November 15, 1988, Hussein immediately extended recognition to the Palestinian entity.
Read More
Palestine
- In Palestine: The Palestine Liberation Organization
A Palestine National Council (PNC) was established to serve as the supreme body, or parliament, of the PLO, and an executive committee was formed to manage PLO activities. Initially, the PNC consisted of civilian representatives from various areas, including Jordan, the West Bank, and the Persian…
Read More - In Palestine: The dispersal of the PLO from Lebanon
…in the meeting of the Palestine National Council in Amman in November 1984, the first time it had met there since Jordan had crushed the PLO armed forces in 1970.
Read More
Palestine Liberation Organization
- In Palestine Liberation Organization: Foundation and early development
The PLO’s legislature, the Palestine National Council (PNC), was composed of members from the civilian population of various Palestinian communities, and its charter (the Palestine National Charter, or Covenant) set out the goals of the organization, which included the complete elimination of Israeli sovereignty in Palestine and the destruction…
Read More - In 20th-century international relations: The Middle East
…in November 1988, when the Palestine National Council, meeting in Algiers, voted overwhelmingly to accept UN Resolutions 242 and 338, calling for Israel to evacuate the occupied territories and for all countries in the region “to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries.” Did this imply PLO recognition of…
Read More