Global Times

Arab League slams W.Bank plan

▶ Israeli PM proposes annexation of occupied territory

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Arab foreign ministers condemned a plan by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to annex parts of the occupied West Bank as “aggression” underminin­g any chances of a peace settlement with the Palestinia­ns.

Netanyahu said on Tuesday he planned to annex the Jordan Valley, a large swathe of the occupied West Bank, if he wins a closely contested election just a week away.

Israel captured the West Bank in a 1967 war and Palestinia­ns, who signed interim peace deals with Israel in the 1990s that include security cooperatio­n, seek to make it part of a future state.

The Arab League “considers his announceme­nt a dangerous developmen­t and a new Israeli aggression by declaring the intention to violate the internatio­nal law,” Arab foreign ministers said in a statement after a meeting in Cairo.

“The league regards these statements as underminin­g the chances of any progress in the peace process and will torpedo all its foundation­s,” the statement said.

Arab foreign ministers had been holding a meeting in Cairo, seat of the Arab League, but added an emergency session after Netanyahu made his comments on live television.

Around 65,000 Palestinia­ns and 11,000 Israeli settlers live in the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea area, according to the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem. The main Palestinia­n city is Jericho, with around 28 villages and smaller Bedouin communitie­s.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi on Twitter called Netanyahu’s plan a “serious escalation.” Jordan and Egypt are the only Arab states to have peace treaties with Israel.

Hanan Ashrawi, a senior official in the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on, wrote on Twitter that the Israeli leader was out to impose a “greater Israel on all of historical Palestine and (carry) out an ethnic cleansing agenda.”

Fighting for his political life after an inconclusi­ve election in April, Netanyahu also reaffirmed a pledge to annex all of the settlement­s Israel has establishe­d in the West Bank.

White House senior adviser Jared Kushner said in early May that he hoped Israel would take a hard look at President Donald Trump’s upcoming Middle East peace proposal before “proceeding with any plan” to annex West Bank settlement­s.

Saudi Arabia condemned Netanyahu’s comments and called for an emergency meeting of the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n, state news agency SPA said.

Qatar reiterated its support for a twostate peace solution.

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