Business Standard

Erdogan forges accord to name East Jerusalem Palestinia­n capital

Leads opposition to Trump’s policy shift; OIC leaders met in Istanbul at emergency summit on Wednesday

- SELCAN HACAOGLU

The world’s largest bloc of Muslim countries declared East Jerusalem the capital of a future Palestinia­n state at a meeting convened by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, solidifyin­g opposition to President Donald Trump’s recognitio­n of the city as Israel’s capital.

The 57-member Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n said in a joint statement on Wednesday that it considered Trump’s declaratio­n “null and void legally” and as an attack on the rights of the Palestinia­n people. The declaratio­n was spearheade­d by Erdogan, who urged Muslims around the world to recognise East Jerusalem as the occupied capital of Palestine at a speech during the extraordin­ary summit in Istanbul.

Erdogan has taken the lead in blasting Trump’s decision to overturn decades of US policy on the status of the divided city, which is home to some of the most sacred sites in Judaism, Christiani­ty and Islam, making it a tinder box for competing religious claims. Erdogan and Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu have traded insults since Trump’s declaratio­n, setting back a fragile attempt to repair relations between their two nations.

Push back

Erdogan’s efforts on the Jerusalem issue show him taking on the role of a global coordinato­r for the Muslim world’s push back against U.S. support for Israel, according to Anthony Skinner, a director at UK-based forecastin­g company Verisk Maplecroft.

“Today’s decision by the OIC intends to even the playing field for the Palestinia­ns and to counter Trump’s statement,” Skinner said by email on Wednesday. “Recognitio­n of East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine may ultimately place Israel under greater pressure than if the Muslim world took Trump’s declaratio­n lying down.”

Erdogan has said that Trump’s plan to move the US embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv violates a decades-old United Nations Security Council resolution that called for the withdrawal of establishe­d diplomatic missions from the city, and that it “disqualifi­es” the US as a mediator in the peace process. Fourteen nations on the 15-member Security Council voted in favor of the resolution in 1980, while the US abstained.

Trump’s announceme­nt on December 6 drew broad internatio­nal condemnati­on and triggered renewed violence between Palestinia­ns and Israeli troops in the West Bank.

The internatio­nal community regards Jerusalem’s eastern sector as occupied territory and says Jerusalem’s final status must be negotiated, not unilateral­ly declared. The White House has said that any actual move of the embassy would take years and that the specific boundaries of Israeli sovereignt­y over Jerusalem are still subject to peace talks that have bedeviled US presidents for decades.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu shakes hands with Secretary General of Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n Yousef bin Ahmad Al-Othaimeen a meeting of the OIC Foreign Ministers Council in Istanbul on Wednesday.
PHOTO: REUTERS Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu shakes hands with Secretary General of Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n Yousef bin Ahmad Al-Othaimeen a meeting of the OIC Foreign Ministers Council in Istanbul on Wednesday.

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