Toronto Star

Jordan to revoke parts of Israel peace treaty

- RUTH EGLASH AND TAYLOR LUCK

JERUSALEM— Jordan’s King Abdullah II announced Sunday that he does not plan to renew parts of the country’s 24-yearold peace agreement with Israel, amid public pressure to rebuke the Israeli government following the U.S. Embassy’s move to Jerusalem and ongoing violence in Gaza.

In Israel, the announceme­nt was received with surprise. Analysts said it was a populist move by the king aimed at opposition groups.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, however, appeared unruffled by the announceme­nt. He said relations with Jordan were still strong.

The deal was signed in November 1994 by Abdullah’s father, King Hussein, and thenIsrael­i prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.

The parts Jordan wants to revoke relate to two parcels of land Jordan leased to Israel for 25 years. The lease on the two territorie­s — one to the north and another farther south — ends in one year.

Jordan had until Thursday to make clear to Israel it would not renew the arrangemen­t. “Baqoura and Ghumar are Jordanian lands and will remain Jordanian and we will exercise full sovereignt­y over our territory,” the king said, according to a royal court statement.

The peace treaty with Israel is deeply unpopular in Jordan, where people claim that successive Israeli government­s have failed to live up to watershari­ng agreements.

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