Imperial Valley Press

Palestinia­ns deny US charges of incitement, blame Trump plan

- BY JOSEPH KRAUSS

JERUSALEM — The Palestinia­ns on Friday rejected U.S. allegation­s of incitement after a day of clashes and attacks left three Palestinia­ns dead, including a member of the security forces, and wounded more than a dozen Israeli soldiers.

They instead linked the violence to President Donald Trump’s Mideast initiative, which heavily favors Israel on all the most contentiou­s issues of the conflict and would allow it to annex large parts of the occupied West Bank.

“Those who introduce plans for annexation and apartheid and the legalizati­on of occupation and settlement­s are the ones who bear full responsibi­lity for deepening the cycle of violence and extremism,” senior Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat said in a statement.

He was responding to remarks delivered the day before by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and the architect of the Mideast blueprint, who had blamed Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas for the latest violence.

“Don’t call for days of rage and encourage (your) people to pursue violence if they’re not getting what they want,” Kushner said on Thursday after briefing the U.N. Security Council on the plan.

He said Abbas “was surprised with how good the plan was for the Palestinia­n people, but he locked himself into a position” by rejecting it before it came out.

Erekat said Abbas will soon bring his own plan to the Security Council, one that he said is rooted in internatio­nal law and based on a two-state solution along the 1967 lines.

Meanwhile, a Palestinia­n teenager died after being shot in the neck in clashes with Israeli soldiers near the West Bank town of Tulkarem on Friday, according to the Palestinia­n health ministry. It identified the deceased as 19-yearold Badir Nafleh.

The Israeli military said the Palestinia­ns hurled rocks and Molotov cocktails, and that troops fired on one of them after he threw a firebomb at the soldiers.

Dozens of demonstrat­ors were wounded in clashes with Israeli forces in different parts of the West Bank, according to the Palestinia­n Red Crescent medical service.

The health ministry said eight Palestinia­ns were hospitaliz­ed after being shot by Israeli forces.

The Palestinia­ns want an independen­t state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, territorie­s seized by Israel in the 1967 war. They view Israel’s settlement­s in the West Bank and east Jerusalem — which are home to some 700,000 people — as a major obstacle to peace.

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