Several organizations and individuals believe that resolution 194 enshrines a right for the Palestinian refugees to return to their homes in territory that Israel occupied in the 1948 war. The
UN General Assembly has reaffirmed Resolution 194 every year since 1949 Palestinian representatives initially rejected resolution 194 because they viewed it as being based on the illegality of the state of Israel. By their reasoning, Israel had no right to prevent the return of the "indigenous Arab people of Palestine". Later, the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and other Palestinian organizations has come to view resolution 194 as one source of legal authority for the right of return. In an address in 2009, Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas stated: Abbas has on other several occasions referred to a "just solution" to the Palestinian refugees "on the basis of Resolution 194".
Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the
PLO Executive Committee has similarly declared that resolution 194 enshrines a non-negotiable right of return: The Palestinian-led
BDS movement asserts that Israel must comply with international law by, among other things, "[r]especting, protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as stipulated in UN Resolution 194."
Israeli view Israel does not believe that it has an obligation to let the refugees return, a view was promulgated by the Israeli leadership even before resolution 194 was adopted. In a cabinet meeting in June 1948 Israel's first
Prime Minister,
David Ben-Gurion stated: "They [the Palestinians] lost and fled. Their return must now be prevented.... And I will oppose their return also after the war." Ben-Gurion's words were echoed by Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir who in 1992 declared that the return of the Palestinian refugees "will never happen in any way, shape or form. There is only a Jewish right of return to the land of Israel." Israel also argued that it did not have to compensate refugees for land and property that they had abandoned. In a press conference in 1949, Sharett stated: In the debates about
UN resolution 273 in May 1949, about Israel's admittance to the UN, Israel's UN representative
Abba Eban promised that the state would honor its obligations under resolution 181 and resolution 194. El Salvador's representative asked: Eban replied: Israel was thus admitted to the United Nations in May 1949 on condition that it "unreservedly accepts the obligations of the UN Charter and undertakes to honour them from the day when it becomes a member of the UN." But Israel didn't comply with the right of return as reaffirmed in resolution 194. Israel has offered to repatriate a number of refugees as part of negotiations: see the
Lausanne Conference (April-September 1949), the
2000 Camp David negotiations, and
Israeli–Palestinian peace process, §Camp David 2000 Summit, Clinton's "Parameters," and the Taba talks.
Polling The Palestinian people have demonstrated strong support for a right of return based on resolution 194. In a 1999 poll by
Elia Zureik, some 61.4% of the Palestinians in Israel said that a proper solution to the refugee issue should be based on resolution 194 and about half found such a solution feasible; in the
occupied Palestinian territories, over 80% of the Palestinians considered resolution 194 to be a just solution to the refugee problem, and about 50% thought implementing 194 was feasible. In contrast, fewer than 5% of Jewish Israeli respondents thought resolution 194 was either just or feasible. == Voting results ==