The Borneo Post

US Jerusalem embassy lies ‘at the end of the world’

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JERUSALEM: ‘ On the edge of wilderness.’ That is how one of Israel’s most famous authors once described the area where the new US Embassy opened in Jerusalem on Monday. Others remember it very differentl­y.

Standing in the valley below the hillside where Israeli and US flags were being hoisted, Palestinia­ns said the land used to be the fields of Arab villagers, who grew fig trees, grapes and wheat there.

Everything about Jerusalem is contested, and always has been. The status of the holy city is at the heart of a bitter conflict.

Upon one thing Israelis and Palestinia­ns are agreed: the decision of a global superpower to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem - on Israel’s 70th anniversar­y - is a definitive moment. But there agreement ends.

Israelis believe that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion lends weight to their long- held position that Jerusalem is the ancient capital of the Jewish people, and home to sacred sites such as the Western Wall and the Jewish temples of antiquity.

But Palestinia­ns are outraged at the US stance on a city that is home to more than 300,000 Arabs, and is the third holiest city in Islam.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas has refused to meet American officials, and said the United States can no longer be regarded as an honest broker.

And as a microcosm of the wider argument the little patch of land chosen for the embassy has its own bundle of complexiti­es, sitting as it does in Arnona, now a mostly Jewish neighbourh­ood south of Jerusalem’s Old City.

The site straddles the line between West Jerusalem and an area known as No Man’s Land, which was created at the end of the 1948 war between Israel and its Arab neighbours.

After a 1949 armistice Israeli forces pulled back to the west of an agreed line, and Jordanians to the east. In some areas there was a space in between that became known as No Man’s Land.

One of those areas was an enclave between the Jewish neighbourh­ood of Talpiot and Arab villages to the east.

T he a r e a r ema i n e d a demilitari­sed zone until the 1967 Six Day War, when Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan, later expanding the limits of Jerusalem and annexing some of the Arab villages into the city.

The move was not recognised i nt e r nat iona l ly a nd t he Palestinia­ns continue to claim East Jerusalem, demanding that it should be the capital of a future Palestinia­n state.

I n F ebr ua r y, US S t at e Depar tment spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert conceded that the embassy site “is located partly in West Jerusalem and what’s called the no man’s land”.

This was confirmed by a senior United Nations official, who was not authorised to speak publicly given the sensitivit­y of the issue.

“There is some uncertaint­y about exactly where the line runs through the property, but I don’t think there is any uncertaint­y about the fact that the line runs through it,” he told Reuters. “Under internatio­nal law it is still occupied territory, because neither party had any right to occupy the area between the lines.”

When Trump recognised Jerusalem as Israel’s capital he left the door open for Israel and the Palestinia­ns to divide the city between them by stating he was not taking a position on “the resolution of contested borders”.

But Nabil Shaath, a veteran Palestinia­n diplomat, said the embassy’s relocation could complicate future peace talks. “Setting the embassy on No Man’s Land is really a violation of the demographi­c and geographic division of Jerusalem,” he said last week.

However Yossi Beilin, a former Israeli peace negotiator, said the location of the embassy would be inconseque­ntial were Palestinia­ns and Israelis to revive the peace process. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? File photo shows constructi­on site near the US consulate in Jerusalem. — Reuters photo
File photo shows constructi­on site near the US consulate in Jerusalem. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Israelis celebrate as they hold Israeli flags during a parade marking the annual Jerusalem Day, at Damascus Gate. — Reuters photo
Israelis celebrate as they hold Israeli flags during a parade marking the annual Jerusalem Day, at Damascus Gate. — Reuters photo

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