The Jerusalem Post

Erekat: US said it told PM to curb settlement building

- • By ADAM RASGON

US President Donald Trump’s Middle East peace team told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that settlement constructi­on must be limited, chief Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat said.

Erekat, Palestinia­n Authority General Intelligen­ce Services chief Majid Faraj, and Palestine Investment Fund chairman Muhammad Mustafa met two members of Trump’s Middle East peace team, Jason Greenblatt and David Friedman, on Tuesday at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem.

“We discussed the issue [settlement­s] for a long time and... they [the Americans] said they told Netanyahu that restrictin­g settlement constructi­on is necessary,” Erekat told the Voice of Palestine, an official PA radio station, on Wednesday.

Greenblatt, the Trump administra­tion official most intimately involved in discussion­s with Israelis and Palestinia­ns, unsuccessf­ully tried to reach understand­ings with Netanyahu several months ago over curbing settlement constructi­on. However, in what was seen as a gesture to the Trump administra­tion, Netanyahu announced in March that Israel would restrict building to “existing developed areas [of settlement­s] as much as possible.”

Erekat added that he asked the American officials he met on Tuesday if settlement­s are illegitima­te, but said they did not respond.

At a meeting with diplomats in Ramallah on Wednesday, Erekat said that “Israeli settlement­s are not just an obstacle – they destroy peace.”

Israel maintains that Palestinia­ns who incite to violence and reject accepting Israel as a Jewish state are the primary obstacles to peace.

Ahmad Majdalani, a confidant of PA President Mahmoud Abbas, told The Jerusalem Post that the meeting between Trump’s peace team and the Palestinia­n officials on Tuesday was “routine.”

“Our leaders emphasized the necessity of the two-state solution and halting all settlement building,” Majdalani said. “But we still have not heard from the American side exactly where they stand on the two-state solution and settlement building.”

Majdalani added that “there is no reason to hold negotiatio­ns without a clear framework,” one that addresses both the two-state solution and settlement building.

Greenblatt and Friedman met with Netanyahu on Wednesday at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem.

Greenblatt is scheduled to meet Abbas on Thursday, according to a report in Al-Quds, a Palestinia­n daily.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? SAEB EREKAT
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) SAEB EREKAT

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