Israel suspended cooperation with UNESCO on Friday after the U.N. cultural organization angered the Israeli government by adopting two resolutions on annexed east Jerusalem ahead of a final vote next week.
In a letter sent to UNESCO Director General Irina Bokova, Education Minister Naftali Bennett accused the body of ignoring “thousands of years of Jewish ties to Jerusalem.”
“I have notified the Israel National Commission for UNESCO to suspend all professional activities with the international organization,” he said.
The resolutions adopted at committee stage on Thursday refer to “Occupied Palestine” and aim to “safeguard the Palestinian cultural heritage and the distinctive character of east Jerusalem.”
They refer to the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in east Jerusalem’s Old City without any reference to the site also being revered by Jews as the Temple Mount.
Participants said that the resolutions, which were put forward by several Arab countries including Egypt, Lebanon and Algeria, were adopted by 24 votes to six with 26 abstentions and two absentees.
They are to be put to the UNESCO Executive Board on Tuesday but in general it votes in line with the decisions taken by committees.
“The theatre of the absurd at UNESCO continues and today the organization adopted another delusional decision which says that the people of Israel have no connection to the Temple Mount and the Western Wall,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in Jerusalem after the decision.
“To declare that Israel has no connection to the Temple Mount and the Western Wall is like saying that China has no connection to the Great Wall of China or that Egypt has no connection to the Pyramids,” Netanyahu said.
The status of Jerusalem is the thorniest issue of the decades-long Palestinian conflict.
Israel captured east Jerusalem during the 1967 war and later annexed it in a move not recognized by the international community, declaring the whole city its indivisible capital.
The Palestinians see east Jerusalem as the capital of their promised future state.