The Citizen (KZN)

Trump’s Israel yes ruffles feathers

RECOGNISED AS CAPITAL ‘IF HE’S ELECTED’ Palestinia­ns accuse Donald of abandoning two-state solution and internatio­nal law.

- Ramallah

Palestinia­n leaders yesterday accused Donald Trump of abandoning any hope of a two-state solution after the Republican candidate said he would recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s “undivided” capital if he won the US presidenti­al election.

Trump on Sunday during a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged he would recognise Israel’s claim over east Jerusalem, which would break with decades of precedent and put Washington at odds with most UN member states.

“Trump’s statement shows disregard for internatio­nal law (and) longstandi­ng US foreign policy regarding the status of Jerusalem,” Saeb Erekat, secretary-general of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on, said in a statement.

“Previous statements delivered by his advisor on Israel show a total abandonmen­t of the two-state solution, internatio­nal law and United Nations resolution­s.”

Israel captured the eastern half of Jerusalem during the 1967 SixDay war and annexed it in 1980, declaring all of Jerusalem Israel’s unified capital.

The Palestinia­ns see east Jerusalem as the capital of their promised future state.

The Palestinia­n foreign ministry issued a statement criticisin­g Trump, as well as his Democrat rival in November’s election, Hillary Clinton, accusing her of overly favouring Israel at the expense of the Palestinia­ns.

“The state of Palestine will not serve as a bargaining chip for gaining the Jewish vote in the US,” the statement said.

After a meeting with Netanyahu in New York, Trump’s campaign released a statement saying “the United States, under a Trump administra­tion, will finally accept the long-standing congressio­nal mandate to recognise Jerusalem as the undivided capital of the state of Israel”.

The US and most other UN member countries do not recognise Israel’s annexation and consider Jerusalem’s final status to be a key issue to be resolved in negotiatio­ns aimed at a two-state settlement.

The US Congress passed a law in 1995, calling for an undivided Jerusalem to be recognised as Israel’s capital. But no US president has implemente­d the law, regarding it as an infringeme­nt on the executive branch’s authority over foreign policy. – AFP

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