Daily Dispatch

Trump heads for Bethlehem to see Palestinia­n leader Abbas

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DONALD Trump made the short trip from Jerusalem to Bethlehem yesterday to meet Mahmud Abbas, who hopes to convince the unpredicta­ble US president to remain committed to an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

His talks in Bethlehem with the Palestinia­n president come after Trump on Monday made a symbolic visit to the Western Wall in Jerusalem and met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Later yesterday, Trump will return to Jerusalem to visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial and give a speech at the Israel Museum before wrapping up his two-day stop.

Trump’s visit to Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s is part of his first trip abroad as president, and follows an initial leg in Saudi Arabia, where he urged Islamic leaders to confront extremism.

He has spoken of reviving long-stalled peace efforts between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns, but few specifics have emerged of how he intends to do so.

Earlier on Monday, Trump also lashed out at Iran, Israel’s arch-enemy, saying it should never be allowed to have nuclear weapons and criticisin­g Tehran for supporting “terrorists” – a reference to militant groups it backs in the region.

He said Iran should have thanked the US for the 2015 nuclear accord between Tehran and world powers because it led to sanctions being lifted.

“Instead of saying thank you to the US, they now feel emboldened,” Trump said.

In Tehran on Monday, Iran’s newly reelected President Hassan Rouhani ridiculed US strategy in the Middle East, dismissing Trump’s summit with Arab leaders in Saudi Arabia as “just a show”.

Security will be tight for Trump’s journey to Bethlehem, a 20-minute drive from Jerusalem but located across Israel’s controvers­ial separation wall.

The wall is part of a project begun in 2002 during the second Palestinia­n intifada, or uprising, that is to extend some 700km once completed.

It is a stark symbol for Palestinia­ns of Israel’s 50-year occupation of the West Bank, and in Bethlehem, the wall has been covered with graffiti and street art.

Trump is to meet Abbas at the presidenti­al palace in Bethlehem, which holds deep significan­ce as the site where Christians believe Jesus was born.

Hossam Zomlot, an aide to Abbas, said that “if President Trump wants to mediate and leads us to a historic agreement, we are ready to be his partners”.

Their talks come with hundreds of Palestinia­ns in Israeli jails on hunger strike since April 17.

On Monday, Palestinia­ns also held a general strike in support of the prisoners.

Clashes broke out near a checkpoint between Jerusalem and Ramallah involving several hundred stone-throwing youths and Israeli soldiers who responded with rubber bullets and tear gas, leaving at least one wounded.

On Monday night in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n enclave run by Abbas’s rivals Hamas organised a demonstrat­ion to denounce its labelling as a “terrorist” group by many Western government­s, including the US.

Trump and Abbas met month at the White House.

Trump initially sparked deep concern among Palestinia­ns when he backed away from the long US commitment to a twostate solution to the conflict.

Meeting Netanyahu in Washington in February, he said he would support a single state if it led to peace, delighting Israeli right-wingers who want to see most of the West Bank annexed.

During his election campaign, Trump also advocated breaking with decades of precedent and moving the American embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, alarming Palestinia­ns. He has since said the move was still being looked at.

At the same time, he urged Israel to hold back on settlement building in the West Bank, a longstandi­ng concern of Palestinia­ns and much of the world.

The most high-profile moment of Trump’s stay in Jerusalem was his visit to the Western Wall, one of the holiest sites in Judaism.

After Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Trump will head to the Vatican, and to Brussels and Italy for Nato and G7 meetings. — AFP earlier this

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