The National - News

Palestine leaders want Abbas to call for statehood recognitio­n from UN

-

Palestinia­n leaders have called on president Mahmoud Abbas to withdraw recognitio­n of Israel and break off security co-operation.

The Palestine Liberation Organisati­on’s central council declared it should no longer be bound by the 1993 Oslo peace accords and that its leaders will never recognise Israel as a Jewish state, they said at the end of a two-day conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

They said Palestinia­ns would again seek full statehood recognitio­n from the UN.

“The immediate goal is the independen­ce of the state of Palestine, which requires moving from the status of an authority with self-rule to the status of sovereignt­y.”

Palestinia­ns will restore their recognitio­n of Israel when Israel accepts Palestine as a state, their statement said.

Mr Abbas has cut off diplomatic contact with the US since president Donald Trump said last month that Jerusalem was Israel’s capital and that he intended to move the American embassy there from Tel Aviv.

Palestinia­ns regard East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state and have long appealed to the US and other nations to resist Israel’s claim to the entire city.

Mr Abbas, who will make the ultimate decision on the council’s recommenda­tions, opened the conference on Sunday by declaring that Palestinia­ns will “slap back” at Mr Trump and seek to replace the US with other internatio­nal players in peace negotiatio­ns with Israel.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is on a visit to India and did not respond to the PLO council. Earlier, he condemned Mr Abbas’s speech, particular­ly the Palestinia­n leader’s assertion that Israel is a “colonial project” that has no real connection to Judaism.

Mr Abbas “revealed the truth and tore off the mask”, Mr Netanyahu said. He had shown that “the source of the conflict between us and the Palestinia­ns is their refusal to recognise the Jewish state with any borders”.

Mr Trump said last week that the US gave the Palestinia­ns hundreds of millions of dollars each year and got “no respect or appreciati­on”. His ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, said the administra­tion is considerin­g a cut in aid to the UN agency that takes care of Palestinia­n refugees.

The government is reviewing a proposal to send less than half of a planned $125 million payment and demand that other countries pay more.

Secretary of state Rex Tillerson, defence secretary James Mattis and national security adviser H R McMaster support that plan, while Ms Haley and senior White House aide Jared Kushner advocate sending nothing.

US government security officials have warned that reducing the assistance that goes for food, education and health care could fuel violence and strengthen radical Palestinia­n forces in the West Bank.

PLO central council calls on president to withdraw recognitio­n of Israel and break from security co-operation agreement

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates