Britain raises Israeli settlements on Balfour centenary
LONDON:PrimeMinisterTheresa May told Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday that Israel must end illegal settlements to achieve peace, as they celebrated the centenary of the British statement that helped lead to the Jewish state’s creation.
The two leaders attended a dinner celebrating the Balfour Declaration of 1917, a statement offering Britain’s support for “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people”.
In a speech at the event, May said Britain was committed to a two-state solution with a viable Palestinian state.
“There will need to be compromises from each side if we are to have a realistic chance of achieving this goal – including an end to the building of new settlements and an end to Palestinian incitement too,” she said.
The prime minister held talks in Downing Street earlier in the day with Prime Minister Netanyahu, who said: “Israel is committed to peace, I’m committed to peace.
“A hundred years after Balfour, the Palestinians should finally accept a Jewish national home and finally accept a Jewish state.
“And when they do, the road to peace will be infinitely closer. In my opinion peace will be achievable.”
The Balfour declaration is seen as a precursor to Israel’s creation in 1948, and the anniversary is a joyous occasion for Israelis.
But many Palestinians say it led to hundreds of thousands fleeing or being forced from their homes, and thousands took to the streets of various cities on Thursday in protest.
Effigies of May and Balfour were set ablaze in the West Bank city of Nablus, while in Hebron protesters burned a British flag.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas wrote in a newspaper opinion piece that “the creation of a homeland for one people resulted in the dispossession and continuing persecution of another”.
May said she would “absolutely not” apologise for the Balfour Declaration, telling dinner guests: “We are proud of our pioneering role in the creation of the state of Israel.”
But she also cautioned that one of the key caveats of the historic letter – that the rights of non-Jewish communities shall be protected – has not been realised. — AFP