The Jerusalem Post

Abbas: 1,000 ‘ no’s’ to the Trump plan

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

Palestinia­ns from across the political spectrum have strongly rejected US President Donald Trump’s plan for Mideast peace, which was unveiled by the White House on Tuesday.

“We say 1,000 ‘ no’s’ to this deal,” Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said.

Referring to the plan as “the slap of the century,” Abbas said he did not find anything new in Trump’s announceme­nt.

“We heard two years ago that he recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital,” he said. “They kept asking us to wait until the plan is announced. Now, we see

that we were right when we rejected it from the beginning. Jerusalem is not for sale. Our rights are not for sale. The plot of the century won’t pass, and it will end up in the dustbin of history.”

Abbas claimed that Trump’s plan was based on the Balfour Declaratio­n “devised by the US and UK to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause. All schemes to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause will fail.”

Abbas announced that he will immediatel­y start taking measures “that require changing the role of the Palestinia­n Authority in accordance with resolution­s taken by the PLO.” He did not specify the nature of the measures.

PLO institutio­ns have previously called for revoking Palestinia­n recognitio­n of Israel, halting security coordinati­on with Israel in the West Bank and renouncing signed agreements between the PA and Israel.

Palestinia­n officials and political factions vowed to work toward thwarting the plan, also known as the “Deal of the Century,” on the pretext that it aims to “liquidate the Palestinia­n cause.”

Abbas was speaking during an emergency meeting of Palestinia­n officials in Ramallah on Tuesday evening to discuss ways of responding to the Trump plan. Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad representa­tives were invited to participat­e in the meeting.

In a televised address, Abbas called the plan a “conspiracy,” adding that his people’s rights “are not for sale.”

“I say to Trump and Netanyahu: Jerusalem is not for sale, all our rights are not for sale and are not for bargain. And your deal, the conspiracy, will not pass,” he said.

Before the meeting, PLO and Fatah officials expressed outrage over Trump’s plan and warned it would have “dangerous consequenc­es” on stability and peace in the Middle East.

The officials expressed hope that the PA leadership would take “fateful and firm” measures in response to the “American- Zionist plot called the Deal of the Century.”

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said the announceme­nt of Trump’s plan “has no value, and it’s not worth the ink it was written with.”

In a first response to the unveiling of the plan, he said: “Palestine will prevail, and Trump and the deal with go to the dustbin of history.”

A statement by several Palestinia­n factions in the Gaza Strip, released shortly after the announceme­nt of the plan, read: “No occupier shall remain on our land. Jerusalem will remain the eternal capital of Palestine. It will remain an Arab and Islamic city.”

The PA requested an emergency meeting of Arab League foreign ministers on Saturday to discuss Trump’s plan. Abbas asked that he address the session to explain the Palestinia­n stance regarding the plan.

Senior Fatah official Jibril Rajoub, who met in Cairo with Arab League Secretary- General Ahmed Aboul Gheit and delivered to him the request for the emergency meeting, expressed hope that the Arab states would reject Trump’s proposals and any plan that contradict­s the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative and United Nations resolution­s.

Palestinia­ns took to the streets in several locations across the West Bank and Gaza Strip to protest Trump’s plan. At some of the protests, demonstrat­ors burned effigies and posters of Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as well as Israeli and US flags.

In downtown Ramallah, dozens of Palestinia­ns gathered in the evening at Manara Square, chanting slogans against Trump and Israel. The protesters vowed to foil the “dubious” Trump “plot” and urged Palestinia­ns to launch “popular resistance” activities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Similar protests took place on Tuesday evening in Nablus, Jenin and Hebron.

Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip also demonstrat­ed during the day to protest Trump’s plan. The protests did not attract large numbers of demonstrat­ors.

Tuesday’s protests came in the context of the “day of rage” announced earlier this week by several Palestinia­n factions in response to the peace plan. The factions said more protests would take place in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the coming days.

Shortly before Trump announced his plan, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh phoned Abbas and offered to work together to foil the deal.

Haniyeh expressed Hamas’s support for Abbas’s opposition to the plan “and all schemes to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause, first and foremost the ‘ Deal of the Century,’” according to a statement released by the PA president’s office.

Haniyeh urged Abbas to lay their aside their difference­s and stand united against Trump’s plan, the statement said.

Abbas also received a phone call from European Union President Charles Michel and discussed the Trump plan with him. Abbas said he explained to Michel why the Palestinia­ns were opposed to the plan, saying it is in violation of internatio­nal law.

“Any peace initiative that ignores Palestinia­n sovereignt­y over east Jerusalem is unacceptab­le,” Abbas reportedly told Michel.

Reuters contribute­d to this report. •

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel