Palestine hails UN decision to commemorate Nakba for 1st time
A demonstrator holds a Palestinian flag during clashes with Israeli forces at a protest against Israeli settlements, Nablus, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Palestine, April 10, 2023. (Reuters Photo)


Palestinians have hailed the United Nations' decision to commemorate the Nakba or the Catastrophe for the first time this year.

Earlier Saturday media reports suggested that the U.N. was planning to commemorate May 15 as Nakba Day, marking the creation of the state of Israel in historical Palestine, for the first time in 2023.

"Commemorating the Nakba must be at the top of our priorities in order to preserve our narrative, which we must adhere to and convey to the whole world," the Palestinian WAFA news agency quoted Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas as saying.

Abbas urged all Palestinians to commemorate the Palestinian tragedy of 1948 "to confront all lies and false narratives that attempt to distort history and facts."

Nakba Day is marked annually by Palestinians on May 15 to remember the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes and areas in 1948 after the founding of Israel.

"What Palestinians everywhere are required to do is to commemorate this tragedy, because it is the first time that the global community does not deny the Nakba," said Abbas.

"On these blessed days, we call on all our people to stand together to face the challenges facing our cause, our land and our sanctities, and to focus our compass towards confronting the occupation and getting rid of it," he added.