The Jerusalem Post

PA freezes contacts with American Consulate officials

Abbas adviser: If US closes PLO’s office in Washington, we’ll continue boycott

- • By ADAM RASGON and MICHAEL WILNER in Washington

The Palestinia­ns have frozen ties with the US Consulate in Jerusalem and with American officials visiting the West Bank in response to the State Department’s decision not to renew the certificat­ion of the PLO’s representa­tive office in Washington, a senior adviser to Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said on Tuesday.

The PLO representa­tive office is the unofficial Palestinia­n Embassy in the American capital. Without a certificat­ion, it could be shut down.

“Communicat­ions with the consulate in Jerusalem and meetings between American and Palestinia­n officials in Palestine are currently frozen because of the decision not to renew the PLO office in Washington’s certificat­ion,” Abbas’s diplomatic affairs adviser, Majdi al-Khalidi, told The Jerusalem Post. “This is temporary until they clarify to us if the office is closed or open. If they tell us the office is closed, we will continue to freeze our communicat­ions.”

According to Khalidi, if Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s senior adviser, or Jason Greenblatt, the administra­tion’s main peace envoy, came to the West Bank, PA officials would not be able to meet with them.

Khalidi added that the PLO representa­tive in Washington, Husam Zomlot, and top Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat were in contact with the Trump Administra­tion.

“Saeb Erekat and Ambassador Zomlot are meeting with the higher authoritie­s in Washington to seek clarificat­ions about whether the office is going to be closed or not,” Khalidi said. “We are still waiting to know if they actually plan to close the office.”

When asked to respond to Khalidi’s remarks about contacts being frozen with the US consulate and American officials visiting the West Bank, a State Department official said: “We continue to be in contact with Palestinia­n officials about the status of the PLO office in Washington, as well as about our larger efforts to advance a lasting and comprehens­ive peace. These discussion­s are ongoing.”

A spokesman at the US Consulate in Jerusalem did not respond to a request for comment.

Last weekend, another State

Department official said that under legislatio­n passed by Congress, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson could not renew a certificat­ion that expired this month for the PLO office “given certain statements made by the Palestinia­n leaders about the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.”

US law says the PLO cannot operate a Washington office if it urges the ICC to prosecute Israelis for alleged crimes against Palestinia­ns.

In an address to the UN General Assembly in September, Abbas appeared to violate this law when he called on the ICC “to open an investigat­ion and prosecute Israeli officials for their involvemen­t in settlement activities and aggression against our people.”

However, the official clarified that after 90 days, Trump could issue a waiver to lift restrictio­ns on the PLO’s activities in the American capital if he “determines the Palestinia­ns have entered into direct, meaningful negotiatio­ns with Israel.”

Abbas has said he is prepared “to work positively” with Trump’s peace efforts.

Khalidi, who is currently with Abbas in Spain, also said that the Palestinia­ns wanted Congress to reverse all laws targeting PLO activities in Washington.

“We also want to resolve Congress’s anti-PLO laws completely. This means we want to open a discussion on this issue and resolve it from its roots,” Khalidi said. “It is not acceptable that we are fighting terror, building our institutio­ns and hosting American presidents, and then they treat us like terrorists. This is not logical.”

However, he said that annulling the US laws would not be a condition to restoring ties with the consulate in Jerusalem and with American officials visiting the West Bank.

Congress has passed many laws targeting PLO activities in Washington.

Reuters contribute­d to this report.

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