Yorkshire Post

Saeb Erekat Peace negotiator

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SAEB EREKAT, who has died at 65, was a veteran peace negotiator and prominent internatio­nal spokesman for the Palestinia­ns for more than three decades.

A former PhD student at Bradford University, he was involved in nearly every round of peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­ns going back to the landmark Madrid conference in 1991, when he famously showed up draped in a black- and- white chequered keffiyeh, a symbol of Palestinia­n nationalis­m.

Over the next few decades, Mr Erekat was a constant presence in Western media, where he tirelessly advocated for a negotiated two- state solution to the decades- old conflict, defended the Palestinia­n leadership and blamed Israel for the failure to reach an agreement.

As a loyal aide to Palestinia­n leaders – first Yasser Arafat and then Mahmoud Abbas – Mr Erekat clung to this strategy until his death, even as hopes for Palestinia­n statehood sank to new lows.

Born in Jerusalem, he spent most of his life in the occupied West Bank town of Jericho, and as a child he witnessed Palestinia­ns fleeing to nearby Jordan during the 1967 war in which Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.

He studied abroad, earning a BA and MA in internatio­nal relations from San Francisco State University and later moved to Bradford, where he focused on conflict resolution. He returned to Yorkshire six years ago for the 40th anniversar­y of the Peace Studies department at Bradford.

Back on the West Bank he became a professor at An- Najah University in Nablus and an editor at the Al- Quds newspaper. A self- described pragmatist, he invited Israeli students to visit the university in the late 1980s and condemned violence on all sides.

He was neverthele­ss convicted of incitement by an Israeli military court in 1987 after troops raided the university. He was later given an eight- month suspended sentence and fined £ 4,700.

The first Palestinia­n uprising erupted later that year in the form of mass protests, general strikes and clashes with Israeli troops.

That uprising, along with US pressure on Israel, culminated in the Madrid conference, widely seen as the start of the Middle East peace process.

Mr Erekat was a prominent representa­tive of Palestinia­ns living inside the occupied territorie­s at the time, but became a close aide to Mr Arafat when the exiled Palestine Liberation Organisati­on ( PLO) returned to the territorie­s following the 1993 Oslo accords.

In subsequent years he routinely served as Mr Arafat’s translator, and was sometimes accused of editing his remarks to soften the rough edges of the guerrilla leader- turned- aspiring statesman.

Throughout the 1990s, Mr Erekat was a frequent guest on news programmes, where he condemned violence on both sides but warned that the peace process was at risk of collapse because of Israel’s refusal to withdraw from the territorie­s.

Mr Erekat was part of the Palestinia­n delegation at Camp David in 2000, when President Bill Clinton brought the two sides together for marathon talks aimed at reaching a final agreement. The talks ended inconclusi­vely and a few months later a second and far more violent uprising erupted.

Mr Arafat died in 2004 but Mr Erekat continued as a top aide to Mr Abbas and served as a senior negotiator in sporadic peace efforts in t he late 2000s.

Mr Erekat is survived by his wife, two sons, twin daughters and eight grandchild­ren.

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