The Jerusalem Post

Ramallah demonstrat­ors protest Trump

- • By ADAM RASGON

“We reject America’s biased positions in favor of Israel,” some 40 demonstrat­ors chanted on Tuesday in Ramallah’s central Manara Square, in the second organized West Bank protest against US President Donald Trump since he took office on January 20.

“The United States has lost its role as a fair interlocut­or” and “Netanyahu and Trump are the same person,” the demonstrat­ors continued, expressing their frustratio­n with the results of Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s meeting last week in the American capital.

With Palestinia­n Authority police blocking traffic, the demonstrat­ors held signs and a handful of flags high for approximat­ely 40 minutes, as some passersby joined.

While no senior PA officials attended, a number of top Palestine Liberation Organizati­on and local leaders participat­ed in the demonstrat­ion, including those of the National and Islamic Forces in Ramallah and al-Bireh coordinato­r Isam Bakr, PLO Executive Committee member Wasel Abu Yousif, and PFLP official Ramzi Rabah.

Bakr, who was responsibl­e for organizing the protest, said that he wants to send a message to the American administra­tion that its policies are unsustaina­ble.

“I am sending a message to America that the Palestinia­n people cannot accept its biased policy in favor of settlement­s,” Bakr said. “Trump’s refusal to take a clear position on a Palestinia­n state has given Netanyahu the green light to build settlement­s and destroy the hope of achieving an independen­t Palestinia­n state.”

Standing alongside Netanyahu, Trump told a White House press conference last Wednesday that he is not married to any particular solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, breaking with decades of firm US commitment to the twostate solution.

“I’m looking at two-state and at one-state and I like the one that both parties like,” Trump said. “I can live with either one. I thought for a while the twostate looked like it may be the easier of the two but honestly if [Mr Netanyahu] and if the Palestinia­ns, if Israel and the Palestinia­ns are happy, I’m happy with the one they like the best.”

Trump also called on Netanyahu to “hold off on settlement­s for a little bit,” setting a different tone in comparison with previous American administra­tions that have outright condemned settlement activity.

Abu Yousif, who is a regular at demonstrat­ions in Ramallah, said that Trump’s statement on settlement­s was insufficie­nt and wants the United States to clarify its position.

“We need the United States to commit to internatio­nal law, which guarantees the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state and says that settlement­s are illegal,” Abu Yousif stated. “Without clear commitment­s, I fear that Netanyahu will continue to destroy the two-state solution by building settlement­s.”

In comparison to the Palestinia­n officials and others at Tuesday’s demonstrat­ions, PA President Mahmoud Abbas has taken a cautious approach in dealing with the Trump administra­tion.

“[I am] ready to deal positively with the Donald Trump administra­tion to make peace,” Abbas said in a statement following last weeks Trump-Netanyahu meeting, refraining from criticizin­g the US president.

Several minutes after Tuesday’s demonstrat­ion, police reopened the streets to traffic and the center of Ramallah returned to business as usual. Bakr, however, said he is already planning more demonstrat­ions, in which he expects more people to participat­e.

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