The President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmud Abbas, has called parliamentary elections for November 28. This is the first election organized in the Palestinian territories in the last 20 years. The organization of the election is part of the reforms requested by the international community that financially supports the Palestinian Authority, reports IPN.
At the same time, 90-year-old Mahmud Abbas announced that the presidential elections will take place at the beginning of 2027. He did not mention whether he will run for another term. His mandate, obtained following the presidential elections of 2005, expired in 2009, but was extended by the Central Council of the Palestine Liberation Organization, in the absence of another election. An attempt to organize elections in 2021 was indefinitely postponed due to the lack of guarantees regarding the conduct of the vote in East Jerusalem.
The Palestinian territories encompass the Gaza Strip, East Jerusalem, and the West Bank. After the Palestinian Authority received permanent observer status at the UN in 2012, the leadership in Ramallah began to use the term Palestine, but the state is officially recognized only by 157 of the 193 UN member countries. The Republic of Moldova does not recognize Palestine’s independence, but established diplomatic relations with the Palestinian Authority in 1994.