The Columbus Dispatch

Longtime Palestinia­n spokesman dies at 65

- Joseph Krauss

JERUSALEM – Saeb Erekat, a veteran peace negotiator and prominent internatio­nal spokesman for the Palestinia­ns for more than three decades, died on Tuesday, weeks after being infected by the coronaviru­s. He was 65.

The American-educated Erekat was involved in nearly every round of peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­ns going back to the landmark Madrid conference in 1991. Over the years, he was a constant media presence. He tirelessly argued for a negotiated two-state solution to the decadesold conflict, defended the Palestinia­n leadership and blamed Israel – particular­ly hard-line leader Benjamin Netanyahu – for the failure to reach an agreement.

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

In the weeks leading up to his death in an Israeli hospital, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain had normalized ties with Israel, breaking with the longheld Arab position that a deal on Palestinia­n statehood must precede normalizat­ion. Abbas and members of his inner circle, including Erekat, found themselves internatio­nally sidelined and deeply unpopular among Palestinia­ns. And decades of unfettered Israeli settlement expansion had made a statehood deal based on the partition of territory increasing­ly unlikely.

Erekat died at the Hadassah Medical Center, the Israeli hospital where he was brought in critical condition last month. He had received a lung transplant in the U.S. in 2017 and was at especially high risk from the virus.

Abbas said Erekat’s death was a “great loss for Palestine and our people, and we feel deeply saddened by his loss, especially in light of these difficult circumstan­ces facing the Palestinia­n cause.”

Abbas said flags will be flown at halfstaff for three days. Erekat’s body was brought to a West Bank hospital and was to be laid to rest in Jericho on Wednesday.

Tributes poured in from world diplomats, including former Israeli and American peace negotiator­s.

U.N. Secretary-general Antonio Guterres said Erekat “was dedicated to the peaceful pursuit of justice, dignity and the legitimate rights of Palestinia­ns to self-determinat­ion, sovereignt­y and statehood.”

“No one believed in the possibilit­y of a two-state solution as ardently as he did; no one fought for it with greater conviction & obstinacy,” tweeted Robert Malley, a senior adviser on the Middle East in the Obama administra­tion.

Yossi Beilin, a former Israeli Cabinet minister and peace negotiator, called Erekat’s death “a big loss for those who believe in peace, both on the Palestinia­n side and the Israeli side.”

Erekat was born on April 28, 1955 in Jerusalem. He spent most of his life in the occupied West Bank town of Jericho, a palm-studded desert oasis about 30 minutes from Jerusalem. As a child in Jericho, he witnessed Palestinia­ns fleeing to nearby Jordan during the 1967 war in which Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.

In interviews, Erekat often spoke about life and his family in Jericho, as a way of explaining the impact of Israeli occupation to foreign viewers. His wit and grasp of colloquial American phrases made him popular with interviewe­rs.

Erekat earned a BA and MA in internatio­nal relations from San Francisco State University and later completed a doctorate at the University of Bradford in the U.K., where he focused on conflict resolution. Erekat also held U.S. citizenshi­p.

When he returned to the West Bank he became a professor at An-najah University in Nablus and an editor at the AlQuds 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 and found an English-language newsletter he had authored in which he wrote that Palestinia­ns must “reject and resist” all forms of occupation.

Erekat insisted he was advocating peaceful resistance and not armed struggle, and he was later given an eight-month suspended sentence and fined $6,250. He later said the stiff penalty proved “the occupation is not working and they are really getting nervous.”

The first intifada, or Palestinia­n uprising, erupted later that year in the form of mass protests, general strikes and clashes with Israeli troops. That uprising, along with U.S. pressure on Israel, culminated in the Madrid conference, widely seen as the start of the Mideast peace process.

Erekat was a prominent representa­tive of Palestinia­ns living inside the occupied territorie­s at the time, but became a close aide to Arafat when the exiled Palestine Liberation Organizati­on returned to the territorie­s following the 1993 Oslo accords. In subsequent years he routinely served as 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, Erekat was a frequent guest on CNN and other news programs, 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.

Then, as now, the Palestinia­ns sought an independen­t state in east Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The Oslo accords were intended to pave the way for such a settlement, but the process stalled amid a wave of suicide bombings and other attacks by Palestinia­n militant groups and continued Israeli settlement constructi­on and failure to keep pledges to turn over territory to Palestinia­n control.

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 final agreement. The talks ended inconclusi­vely, and a few months later a second and far more violent intifada erupted.

By then Erekat had become a senior Palestinia­n official and was seen as a possible successor to Arafat, who died in a French hospital in 2004. He continued as a top aide to Abbas and served as a senior negotiator in sporadic peace efforts in the late 2000s.

“I am the most disadvanta­ged negotiator in the history of man,” he told a reporter in 2007, the year that the Islamic militant group Hamas seized control of Gaza from Abbas’ forces. “I have no army, no navy, no economy, my society is fragmented.”

Erekat resigned as chief negotiator in 2011 after a trove of documents was leaked to the pan-arab broadcaste­r AlJazeera showing the Palestinia­n leadership had offered major concession­s in past peace talks. But Erekat remained a senior Palestinia­n official and a close adviser to Abbas, who later appointed him secretary-general of the PLO.

Israel and the Palestinia­ns have not held substantiv­e talks since Netanyahu – a hard-liner who opposes concession­s to the Palestinia­ns – took office in 2009.

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh and Haitham Hamad in Ramallah, West Bank, and Josef Federman in Jerusalem contribute­d to this report.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AP ?? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, listens to Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat make a statement to the press after a meeting.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AP U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, listens to Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat make a statement to the press after a meeting.

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