Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Protests continue in Iran

- By Ilan Ben Zion

Demonstrat­ors tried to overrun military bases and police stations as unrest increased.

JERUSALEM — The central committee of Israel’s ruling Likud party has unanimousl­y endorsed a resolution calling for the annexation of West Bank settlement­s, sending a message to the Palestinia­ns in the wake of President Donald Trump’s recognitio­n of Israel’s capital.

The decision Sunday night marked the latest step by Likud to distance itself from the internatio­nally backed idea of establishi­ng an independen­t Palestinia­n state as part of a future peace deal. The Palestinia­ns condemned the decision and accused Trump of emboldenin­g the Likud party.

The central committee is only an advisory body, and Sunday’s vote did not reflect an official policy change. But its decisions reflect the prevailing opinions in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s party.

Several leading politician­s, including senior members of Netanyahu’s cabinet, joined the vote to “impose Israeli law on all liberated areas of settlement in Judea and Samaria.”

Among them were Intelligen­ce Minister Israel Katz, Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan, Environmen­tal Protection Minister Zeev Elkin, Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely and Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat.

Netanyahu, however, skipped the vote, and his office declined to comment.

Erdan said the Likud party was responsibl­e for annexing Jerusalem and the Golan Heights in the 1980s, and it would do so with West Bank settlement­s as well. “Our right to the land of Israel begins with Judea and Samaria,” he said.

“Two states for two peoples is a concept that has disappeare­d from the world,” Science Minister Ofir Akunis was quoted as saying by the Haaretz daily. “And to my joy, U.S. President Trump is sitting in the White House and does not accept this mistaken concept.”

Trump has said he hopes to broker what he calls the “ultimate deal” between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, and he has appointed a high-level team, headed by his son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner, to come up with a peace plan. But after nearly a year on the job, they still have not floated a proposal. In other developmen­ts: Mike Pence’s office on Monday said the U.S. vice president still plans on visiting Israel this month, despite an apparent delay in the schedule.

Pence had been scheduled to come during the week of Jan. 14. But Israel’s Foreign Ministry said Monday that the visit was no longer on its schedule for January.

An Israeli military court indicted a teenage Palestinia­n girl on Monday who was filmed last month in the West Bank slapping Israeli troops who refused to respond.

Palestinia­ns have since hailed Ahed Tamimi, 16, as an icon in their fight against Israel. In Israel, the footage sparked debate about the soldiers’ refusal to react.

In a departure from his predecesso­rs, Trump last month said he was upending decades of U.S. policy and recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

While Trump said his decision was not meant to prejudge negotiatio­ns on the city’s final borders, it infuriated the Palestinia­ns, who accused him of siding with Israel. The Palestinia­ns seek Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, home to key holy sites, as their capital, and the internatio­nal community has long said that the city’s fate should be decided through negotiatio­ns.

Trump also has softened his predecesso­rs’ support for the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel, saying instead that he would support a twostate solution only if both sides agree to it.

Most of the internatio­nal community considers Israel’s West Bank settlement­s, built on land captured in the 1967 Mideast war and claimed by the Palestinia­ns for their future state, illegal.

The Palestinia­ns called the Likud vote “an outrageous violation” of internatio­nal resolution­s and “could not be taken without the full support of the U.S. administra­tion.”

Israeli opposition leader Isaac Herzog called the Likud decision “irresponsi­ble, impractica­l and unnecessar­y.”

 ?? ODED BALILTY/AP 2017 ?? Several politician­s joined the vote to “impose Israeli law on all liberated areas of settlement in Judea and Samaria.”
ODED BALILTY/AP 2017 Several politician­s joined the vote to “impose Israeli law on all liberated areas of settlement in Judea and Samaria.”

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