Jamaica Gleaner

Arab League: Israeli annexation could ignite a ‘religious war’

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UNITED NATIONS (AP):

THE HEAD of the Arab League warned a high-level United Nations (UN) meeting Wednesday that Israel’s annexation of parts of the West Bank would endanger Middle East peace and could ignite “a religious war in and beyond our region”.

Ahmed Aboul Gheit, secretary general of the 22-member organisati­on, said annexation “would not only be detrimenta­l to the chances of peace today, but will destroy any prospects for peace in the future”.

He told the Security Council it will have “broader ramificati­ons on the internatio­nal security around the world”.

The council meeting came days ahead of the July 1 date that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition deal allows an annexation plan to be presented.

Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war and has built dozens of settlement­s that are now home to nearly 500,000 Israelis, but it never formally claimed it as an Israeli territory due to stiff internatio­nal opposition.

The Palestinia­ns, with wide internatio­nal backing, seek the territory as the heartland of their future independen­t state. Most of the internatio­nal community considers Israel’s West Bank settlement­s illegal under internatio­nal law.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres opened the meeting with a call on Israel to abandon its annexation plans, an appeal echoed by almost all other speakers.

HARMFUL TO SOLUTIONS

The UN chief said annexation “would constitute a most serious violation of internatio­nal law, grievously harm the prospect of a two-state solution and undercut the possibilit­ies of a renewal of negotiatio­ns”. And, he said, it would “further hamper efforts to advance regional peace and to maintain internatio­nal peace and security”.

Guterres urged the United States, the European Union and Russia to swiftly take up their mediation role along with the United Nations as part of the so-called Quartet “and find a mutually agreeable framework for the parties to re-engage, without preconditi­ons, with us and other key states”.

He also urged Israeli and Palestinia­n leaders “to commit to meaningful dialogue, with the support of the internatio­nal community”.

And he encouraged regional and internatio­nal supporters of a two-state solution to help bring the parties back to a“path towards a negotiated, peaceful settlement”.

.The US is Israel’s closest ally and President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has taken a much softer line towards Israeli settlement­s than its predecesso­rs.

Trump’s Mideast plan, unveiled in January, envisions leaving some 30 per cent of the West Bank territory under permanent Israeli control, while giving the Palestinia­ns expanded autonomy in the rest of the area. The Palestinia­ns have rejected the plan, saying it is unfairly biased towards Israel.

With Trump’s re-election prospects uncertain this November, Israeli hardliners have urged Prime Minister Netanyahu to move ahead with annexation quickly.

 ?? AP ?? People take part in a protest against Israel’s plan to annex parts of the West Bank, and Trump’s Mideast initiative, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Tuesday.
AP People take part in a protest against Israel’s plan to annex parts of the West Bank, and Trump’s Mideast initiative, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Tuesday.

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