Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

With eye on Trump, Paris meeting to push for peace in West Asia

- By Clare Byrne with Laurent Lozano in Jerusalem

Netanyahu called the resolution “shameful” and has also lashed out at the Paris meeting. On Thursday he called the gathering “a rigged conference, rigged by the Palestinia­ns with French auspices to adopt additional anti-Israel stances”.

PARIS, Jan 13 (AFP) - Around 70 countries and internatio­nal organisati­ons make a new push for a two-state solution in West Asia at a conference on Sunday, just days before Donald Trump takes office vowing unstinting support for Israel.

The Paris meeting aims to revive the moribund Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process, amid fears of fresh violence if Trump implements a pledge to recognise the contested city of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

But neither Israel nor the Palestinia­ns will be represente­d in Paris, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dismissed it as a “rigged” conference, insisting that only bilateral talks can bring peace.

On his farewell tour, US Secretary of State John Kerry will join foreign ministers from around 40 countries and representa­tives from the UN, EU, Arab League and other organisati­ons in calling for a two-state deal.

The meeting is also expected to back a UNresoluti­on last month condemning Israeli settlement building in occupied Palestinia­n territory.

The UN Security Council adopted the resolution after the Obama administra­tion -- in a parting shot at Netanyahu -took the rare step of abstaining from the vote.

Netanyahu called the resolution “shameful” and has also lashed out at the Paris meeting.

On Thursday he called the gathering “a rigged conference, rigged by the Palestinia­ns with French auspices to adopt additional anti-Israel stances”.

“This pushes peace backwards,” he said, calling it “a last gasp of the past”.

The Palestinia­ns, who are trying to rally opposition to a contentiou­s promise by Trump to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, have lauded the multilater­al initiative.

“The bilaterals have not ended occupation even though we have been engaged in bilateral talks for the last 26 years,” said senior Palestinia­n official Mohammad Shtayyeh.

Palestinia­n president Mahmud Abbas will meet French President Francois Hollande in the coming weeks to be briefed on the conference outcome, French diplomats said.

Netanyahu declined a similar invitation, they added.

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