The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Macron chides Netanyahu on settlement­s, urges new Mideast talks

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PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron told Israel’s visiting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Paris opposes Israel’s expansion of settlement­s in occupied Palestinia­n territory as he urged fresh Middle East peace talks.

Stressing that internatio­nal law should be ‘respected by all’, Macron said: “I am thinking here of (Israel’s) continued building” in occupied Palestinia­n territory.

Israelis and Palestinia­ns should be able “to live side by side within secure and recognised borders with Jerusalem as the capital”, Macron said after his first official talks with Netanyahu.

“I hope everything will be done for negotiatio­ns to move forward,” he said.

Talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns have been at a standstill since the failure of US mediation in the spring of 2014.

Macron, elected in May, appears to be following the proactive line taken by his Socialist predecesso­r Francois Hollande, whose efforts to mobilise the internatio­nal community on the peace process angered Israel. The French leader met Palestinia­n leader Mahmud Abbas, when he said he backed a two-state solution and opposed Israeli settlement­s.

“France has always condemned the continuati­on of settlement building, which is illegal under internatio­nal law and has reached an unpreceden­ted level since the beginning of the year,” he said in his first public remarks on the conflict since taking office.

The United Nations reported in June that Israel had announced a substantia­l increase in settlement­s in the past three months despite a UN resolution demanding a halt to the Jewish outposts.

Macron and Netanyahu underscore­d their two countries’ longstandi­ng friendship as they marked the 75th anniversar­y of a notorious 1942 roundup of 13,000 Jews to be sent to Nazi death camps.

Netanyahu was the first Israeli prime minister to attend a Vel d’Hiv commemorat­ion, and he said the invitation was a ‘very, very strong gesture’.

Macron addressed Netanyahu as ‘dear Bibi’ and called ‘antiZionis­m’ a new form of antiSemiti­sm. Netanyahu’s presence at the event drew fire from some groups, notably the Union of French Jews for Peace, which accused the Israeli government of ‘usurping the memory of the victims of Nazism to make people believe that Israel represents all the world’s Jews’.

During their talks afterwards, Macron assured Netanyahu of his ‘vigilance’ regarding the 2015 nuclear accord reached by Western powers with Israel’s arch-enemy Iran.

Netanyahu was a vocal opponent of the deal, which saw sanctions against Iran eased in return for curbs on its nuclear programme. The French presidency said meeting would be an occasion to ‘signal our lack of complacenc­y towards Iran’.

Since taking office, Macron has drawn praise for his balanced but firm handling of encounters with world leaders such as US President Donald Trump and his Russian opposite number Vladimir Putin. Macron rolled out the red carpet for Trump on Friday when he was guest of honour for France’s Bastille Day festivitie­s.

The French leader criticised Trump over his renunciati­on of the Paris climate accord, but he stressed their close cooperatio­n against the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.

Similarly with Putin, whom Macron hosted at the sumptuous Versailles palace in May, the French leader stood firm on French opposition to Russia’s annexation of Ukraine in 2014.

But he said the removal of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – Moscow’s chief ally in the Middle East – was not a prerequisi­te to a solution to the six-year-old conflict in Syria. — AFP

France has always condemned the continuati­on of settlement building, which is illegal under internatio­nal law and has reached an unpreceden­ted level since the beginning of the year. Emmanuel Macron, French President

 ??  ?? Macron and Netanyahu attend a news conference to make a joint declaratio­n at the Elysee Palace in Paris. — Reuters photo
Macron and Netanyahu attend a news conference to make a joint declaratio­n at the Elysee Palace in Paris. — Reuters photo

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