Bangkok Post

Palestinia­ns fear Netanyahu win

Poll victory could embolden Israeli PM to proceed with annexation, writes Hossam Ezzedine

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In the Palestinia­n village of Ain al-Beida, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s surprise election win has raised fears among residents that their land may be annexed. The 70-year-old right-winger campaigned on building thousands of new settler homes in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, as well as extending Israeli sovereignt­y into the Jordan Valley.

“Of course we are afraid they will annex these lands,” said 85-year-old Majed Abu al-Hajj, pondering what restrictio­ns await outside the confines of his home and small garden.

Final results from Monday’s election are still pending, but Netanyahu’s Likud along with its allies are currently three seats short of a majority in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset.

It remains unclear if the prime minister, who is under criminal indictment on corruption charges, will be able to form a government.

Equally uncertain is when he would move to annex the Jordan Valley if he secures a new term.

The strategica­lly important region makes up about a third of the West Bank and Palestinia­ns say without it their hopes of a future state are dashed.

The roughly 1,600 residents of Ain al-Beida, in the northern West Bank and part of the Jordan Valley, said they suspect Israel will annex their land, even if they don’t know so for sure.

They said more than half of Ain alBeida’s original land of around 600 hectares is already under the control of Israeli settlers or companies.

US President Donald Trump’s widely criticised peace proposals, unveiled in

January, gave Israel the green light to annex the Jordan Valley and all settlement­s into Israel.

The plan was immediatel­y rejected by the Palestinia­ns, who accused Trump of blatant pro-Israel bias.

The Trump proposal called for a technical committee to finalise the details of annexation­s. Mr Netanyahu said that committee has already started work.

“We know that Netanyahu promised his voters to annex about 40 percent of the West Bank,” Mr Hajj said.

“Nothing is in our hands.”

PALESTINIA­N ANGER

Senior Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat said on Tuesday there could be “violence and bloodshed” if Israel proceeds with annexation plans.

The same day, several Israeli trucks carried tanks down a main street in the Jordan Valley.

Despite lacking a parliament­ary majority, Mr Netanyahu is expected to be selected by the president to attempt to form an administra­tion after his Likud party won 36 seats, its best-ever performanc­e with him as party leader.

Professor Eugene Kontorovic­h, director of internatio­nal law at the right-wing Israeli Kohelet Policy

Forum, said the election results would embolden Mr Netanyahu to follow through with annexation.

“The overwhelmi­ng majority of those elected support applicatio­n of Israeli law to Israeli communitie­s,” Prof Kontorovic­h, who advised the US administra­tion in the drawing up of its peace proposals, said.

“The notion he lacks a mandate for this has been dispelled.”

Internatio­nal powers have for decades called for the creation of an independen­t Palestinia­n state alongside Israel -- the two-state solution, though Mr Trump’s full-blooded support for the Jewish state has fractured that consensus.

Hugh Lovatt, Israel-Palestine analyst at the European Council on Foreign Relations think-tank, warned Israel annexing the Jordan Valley would be seen by many in the internatio­nal community as not just “pushing a two-state solution beyond reach, but also crossing the threshold into apartheid”.

Prof Kontorovic­h said Mr Netanyahu would simultaneo­usly be seeking to form a coalition and progress with annexation.

“If Netanyahu can form a government quickly that will probably speed up the other process. But I think a couple of months is probably about the right timeframe [for annexation].”

In the Jalazone Palestinia­n refugee camp, Mr Netanyahu’s victory has raised fears about the future.

Hassan Abdel-Hafez, who could not remember his age but estimated about 80, said he had seen decades of strife.

“The coming period will be one of the hardest for the Palestinia­n people.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Israeli soldiers walk as Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors gather on a hilltop during a protest against Israeli settlement­s in the town of Beita in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on Monday.
REUTERS Israeli soldiers walk as Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors gather on a hilltop during a protest against Israeli settlement­s in the town of Beita in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on Monday.

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