The Jerusalem Post

‘Annexation would close door on Israeli-Palestinia­n peace talks’

UN coordinato­r’s brief came as Likud and Blue and White Party heads remain at odds over whether next government should impose sovereignt­y over settlement­s

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

West Bank annexation will make it impossible to renew Israeli-Palestinia­n peace talks and would destroy any possibilit­y of a twostate resolution to the conflict, UN Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov told the UN Security Council on Monday.

“Unilateral steps are detrimenta­l to peace,” he said in a briefing to the council via a video conference.

The conference was not posted on the UN website, but his comments were published after the informal meeting.

“In recent months, Israeli officials have repeatedly stated their intention to annex Israeli settlement­s and other parts of the occupied West Bank,” Mladenov said. “If implemente­d, such steps would not only constitute a serious violation of internatio­nal law, but they would also effectivel­y end the prospect of the two-state solution and close the door to negotiatio­ns between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.”

He spoke as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue and White Party heads are at odds over whether the next government would impose sovereignt­y over settlement­s.

Mladenov spoke to the Security Council about annexation and settlement expansion as part of his monthly briefings. He also presented his quarterly update on Israel’s refusal to comply with 2016 UNSC resolution 2334 that called for a halt to all settlement activity. He included Jewish homes in east Jerusalem in his report on settlement activity.

From December 18, 2019, to March 20, 2020, Israel advanced or approved plans for 3,700 settler homes in settlement­s and 100 in east Jerusalem, Mladenov said. Tenders for some 3,200 settler housing units over the pre-1967 lines were announced, including 1,077 for a new neighborho­od in east Jerusalem named Givat Hamatos, he said.

About 30% of the units that were advanced would be built in isolated settlement­s far beyond the Green Line, Mladenov said.

In addition, Israel advanced plans for 3,500 homes in the E1 section of the Ma’aleh Adumim settlement and for the “so-called sovereignt­y road” that bypasses the constructi­on project, he said.

“If constructe­d, these [E1] units would expand the settlement of Ma’aleh Adumim towards Jerusalem, severing the connection between the northern and southern West Bank, thereby further underminin­g the possibilit­y of a viable and contiguous Palestinia­n state,” Mladenov said. “The existence and expansion of settlement­s further entrench the occupation and systematic­ally erode the possibilit­y of establishi­ng a contiguous and viable Palestinia­n state and fuel anger and resentment among the Palestinia­n population.”

REGARDING IDF demolition­s, he said Israel had taken down two illegally built modular homes in the Kumi Ori outpost and demolished structures in the outposts of Ma’aleh Shlomo and Ma’aleh Pinchas, which led to clashes between settlers and security forces.

Mladenov called on Israel to halt its demolition of illegal Palestinia­n homes, given that it remains “very difficult for Palestinia­ns to obtain” building permits. During the reporting period, Israel demolished or seized 96 Palestinia­n-owned structures, including 50 in east Jerusalem. As a result, 227 people were displaced, including 53 women and 122 children, he said.

He warned that hundreds of Palestinia­ns in east Jerusalem were in danger of forced eviction if the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court orders to evict several Palestinia­n families from the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Silwan were upheld.

Terrorism and violence continued in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, Mladenov said. Nine Palestinia­ns, including two children, were killed and some 30 were wounded by Israeli security forces. He listed incidents showing that two of the Palestinia­ns were killed attacking Israeli security forces and the remainder during clashes with those forces.

One of those killed was a Palestinia­n Authority policeman who was shot to death when “he was inside a police station,” Mladenov said, adding that the IDF has opened an investigat­ion into the incident.

“In March, there have been a number of incursions by settlers in Palestinia­n towns, particular­ly in Ramallah and Nablus,” he said.

Some 30 Israelis, including four children, were wounded by Palestinia­ns, he added.

Mladenov dismissed any peace plan, including the US one that was published in January, that does not comply with past internatio­nal understand­ings that a two-state resolution to the conflict must be based on the pre-1967 lines. In February, the UN Security Council reiterated its support for a two-state solution based on those understand­ings, he said.

“Now is the time to find a way to move the process forward and to advance proposals to bring the parties back into a mutually agreed framework that allows for meaningful negotiatio­ns to commence,” Mladenov said. “In the absence of a renewed commitment of the parties to pursue concrete measures that will lead to genuine political progress, the situation I’m afraid will continue to deteriorat­e.”

 ?? (Mike Segar/Reuters) ?? NICKOLAY MLADENOV. He said Israel approved 3,700 settler homes in West Bank settlement­s and 100 in east Jerusalem.
(Mike Segar/Reuters) NICKOLAY MLADENOV. He said Israel approved 3,700 settler homes in West Bank settlement­s and 100 in east Jerusalem.

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