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Bahrain downplays Australia’s Jerusalem decision after Arab League’s scathing comments

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Bahrain’s foreign minister downplayed Australia’s decision to recognise West Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, while the Arab League said the move was dangerous to peace prospects.

Sheikh Khalid Al Khalifa said the Australian decision would not damage Palestinia­n hopes of a sovereign state with East Jerusalem as its capital.

“Australia’s stance does not impact the legitimate Palestinia­n demands, first among them being East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, and it does not contradict the Arab Peace Initiative,” he tweeted on Saturday.

The Arab League had issued a statement criticisin­g the Australian decision as “blatantly biased towards the positions and policies of the Israeli occupation”.

Sheikh Khalid described the statement as “mere rhetoric and irresponsi­ble”.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the decision on Saturday, with the caveat that Canberra would not move its embassy to Jerusalem until a peace agreement had been struck.

It followed US President Donald Trump’s decision in May to relocate the American embassy from Tel Aviv to the contested city.

Australia’s decision, like Mr Trump’s, angered the Arab world and western allies. The Arab League said it would harm Australia’s relations with Arab allies.

“The decision is a dangerous violation of the internatio­nal legal status of the city of Jerusalem and the relevant legitimacy resolution­s,” said Saeed Abu Ali, Arab League assistant secretary general for the occupied Palestinia­n and Arab lands.

The Arab body said such recognitio­n would embolden Israel’s hard-right government to continue its policies in East Jerusalem, the territory it occupied in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and where it has establishe­d a network of settlement­s that Palestinia­ns say seeks to prevent the formation of any contiguous Palestinia­n state.

Malaysia also censured its ally for reversing decades of foreign policy.

“Jerusalem should remain as it is now and not the capital of Israel,” Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammed told Reuters.

“Jerusalem has always been under Palestine, so why are they taking the initiative to divide Jerusalem not belonging to them, but to divide the Arabs and the Jews? They have no rights.”

The status of Jerusalem, home to sites holy to the Muslim, Jewish and Christian faiths, is one of the biggest obstacles to a peace agreement between Israel and Palestinia­ns.

Israel regards all of Jerusalem as its capital, including the eastern sector that it annexed in a move not recognised internatio­nally.

The reaction in Israel to Australia’s decision was mixed.

The foreign ministry called it a “step in the right direction” but Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment.

It is thought that he had expected Australia to move its embassy to the contested city.

A Cabinet minister, Tzachi Hanegbi, was more critical, saying that Canberra had “made a mistake”.

The Australian prime minister said Canberra’s embassy would not move until a peace agreement had been struck

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