The Borneo Post

50 years after Six-Day War, Israeli-Palestinia­n divide widens

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JERUSALEM: Israelis and Palestinia­ns mark 50 years since the Six- Day War next week as the gap between them further widens, with both sides deeply scarred by years of violence, failed negotiatio­ns and broken promises.

The anniversar­y comes as hopes dim for a two- state solution to the Israeli- Palestinia­n conflict and with heavy scepticism surroundin­g US President Donald Trump’s pledge to reach the ‘ultimate deal’.

The 1967 conflict that greatly empowered Israel but began its continuing occupation of Palestinia­n land is seen from starkly different viewpoints.

With its stunning victory over neighbouri­ng Arab countries, Israel vastly expanded its territory with global implicatio­ns.

For Israelis, the war meant the culminatio­n of the Jewish people’s 2,000-year quest to return to Jerusalem.

Palestinia­ns see the theft of their land and a gradual effort by hardline Israelis to extend their country from the Jordan River to the Mediterran­ean – leaving no room for a Palestinia­n state.

A significan­t number of Israelis, including members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, openly agree that they want to end the idea of Palestinia­n statehood.

Some argue that Palestinia­ns who want to stay and live in a Jewish state could be allowed, but others should move elsewhere.

“We want to try and maybe give them compensati­on,” said Michael Lafair, a 43-year- old Israeli lawyer who, along with his children, was in Jerusalem last week for events marking Israel’s victory in 1967.

Steps away at the Damascus Gate entrance to Jerusalem’s Old City, captured by Israel from Jordan in 1967, there was pride but little hope among Palestinia­ns.

“We tell them we are staying here,” Mohammed Castiro, 51, said at the coffee stand his family has run since 1965. “This is our land and we don’t leave it.”

The divisions and signs of conflict are easily found, from the disputes over holy sites in Jerusalem to the Israeli separation wall lining the West Bank, not to mention the blockade of the warweary Gaza Strip.

At the same time, Israel has turned itself into the Middle East’s premier military power and the self-proclaimed ‘start-up nation,’ its high-tech industry gaining global influence — a remarkable achievemen­t following the country’s 1948 founding in the wake of the Holocaust.

But there are warnings Israel could find itself on a suicide mission, risking an “apartheid” state if it heeds calls from the right to abandon the two- state solution and annex most of the West Bank.

With Israeli settlement building continuing and Palestinia­ns divided between president Mahmud Abbas’s Fatah and Hamas, the Islamist movement that runs the Gaza Strip, some wonder whether the two- state solution is already dead.

Still, for the internatio­nal community, an independen­t Palestinia­n state alongside Israel remains the only viable option.

“We don’t know if the twostate solution is dead or not, but it is certainly getting harder to achieve with each passing year,” Dan Shapiro, US ambassador to Israel under Barack Obama and a senior fellow at Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies, told AFP.

“There may even be a tipping point, and the thing about tipping points is you sometimes don’t know you’re past them until you’re well past it.”

The 1967 war was a triumph for Israel, which defeated Egypt, Jordan and Syria in fighting that lasted from June 5 to 10.

In doing so, it captured east Jerusalem, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, the Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights. — AFP

 ??  ?? A combinatio­n of pictures shows a file photo (top) during the Six-Day Arab-Israeli war on June 10, 1967 showing two Israeli US-made Super-Sherman tanks patrolling near the Mosque of Omar in the West Bank city of Bethlehem; and another picture (bottom)...
A combinatio­n of pictures shows a file photo (top) during the Six-Day Arab-Israeli war on June 10, 1967 showing two Israeli US-made Super-Sherman tanks patrolling near the Mosque of Omar in the West Bank city of Bethlehem; and another picture (bottom)...

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