The Manila Times

Ex-leaders warn vs Israel annexation plan

- AP

UNITED NATIONS: A group of former world leaders urged European leaders on Friday ( Saturday in Manila) to keep pressuring Israel against annexation of parts of the West Bank, warning against complacenc­y after Israel made no move to take over the territory on July 1.

The Elders, founded by the late Nelson Mandela in 2007, said in letters to the leaders of France, Germany, Britain and the European Union that they should insist to Israel that annexation would have negative political and economic consequenc­es for bilateral and regional relations.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had aimed to start the process by Wednesday, saying he wanted to begin annexing West Bank territory in line with President Donald Trump’s Mideast plan.

But Israeli Cabinet Minister Ofir Akunis said the annexation process had been delayed, telling Israel’s Army Radio station on Wednesday that officials were still working out the final details with their American counterpar­ts. He said he expected the annexation to take place later in July.

The two-state solution, backed by the United Nations Security Council and the vast majority of the internatio­nal community, envisions an independen­t Palestinia­n state in the entire West Bank — territory Israel captured from Jordan in 1967 — and Gaza, with agreed land swaps.

The Palestinia­ns want East Jerusalem as the capital of their state but the future of Jerusalem is considered a final status issue to be decided in Israeli-Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns.

The Trump administra­tion’s peace plan, unveiled in January, envisions bringing some 30 percent of the West Bank under permanent Israeli control and gave a green light for Israel to annex that territory.

The plan would establish a disjointed Palestinia­n state with limited autonomy in carved-up pockets of the remaining land. The Palestinia­ns have vehemently rejected the plan as pro-Israeli.

The delay cast further uncertaint­y over whether Israel will ultimately follow through on the explosive annexation initiative, which has also drawn fierce internatio­nal condemnati­ons from some of Israel’s closest allies.

The UN, the EU and key Arab countries have all said annexation would violate internatio­nal law and undermine the already diminished prospects of establishi­ng a viable independen­t Palestinia­n state alongside Israel.

The Elders — led by former Irish president Mary Robinson with Mandela’s widow Graca Machel and former UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon as co-chairs — said annexation “is fundamenta­lly contrary to the long- term interests of both the Israeli and the Palestinia­n peoples.”

They said annexation “will not dampen future Palestinia­n demands for rights and self-determinat­ion, but destroying hopes in a two-state compromise will increase the risks of future violence in one of the most combustibl­e areas in the world.”

The Elders called on EU leaders to consider suspending the 27- nation’s Associatio­n Agreement with Israel if annexation goes ahead in any form. They also recalled the United Kingdom’s “historical and abiding responsibi­lity” as the colonial power in pre-1948 Palestine.

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