The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­ns stiffen battle against annexation

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH, TOVAH LAZAROFF and OMRI NAHMIAS in Washington

The Palestinia­ns have turned to the UN to halt Israel’s pending plans to annex West Bank settlement­s, with a Security Council discussion on the matter expected to be held on May 20.

Palestinia­n envoy to the UN, Riyad Mansour, said the Palestinia­ns were seeking a “wide and powerful front in the UN to prevent Israel from annexing parts of the West Bank.”

Mansour said the Palestinia­ns sent letters to the UN Security Council and General Assembly regarding Israel’s “illegal plans concerning settlement­s and annexation.” He said he expected the Security Council members to discuss the Israeli plan during the council’s session on May 20.

Earlier this week, the “Arab Troika” in New York, under the chairmansh­ip of Oman, met with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and warned him about the repercussi­ons of the Israeli plan.

“The Arab delegation emphasized the illegality of all colonizati­on and annexation measures by Israel, the occupying power, and strongly condemned Israel’s plan to annex large areas of the West Bank in grave violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, UN resolution­s and the charter prohibitin­g the acquisitio­n of territory by force,” the Arab group said in a statement.

“They deplored Israel’s cynical exploitati­on of this period of global pandemic to advance these illegal plans, and underscore­d the internatio­nal community’s broad rejection and demands for a halt to these illegal actions.”

The Arab delegation warned that Israel’s actions “are severely violating the Palestinia­n people’s rights and destroying the viability of the two-state solution on the pre-1967 borders.” The Arab delegates also warned that, if not stopped, Israel’s “illegal actions would result in a one-state reality, bringing only more conflict and suffering and impeding prospects for peace and security in the entire region.”

In Ramallah, Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was scheduled to chair a meeting of the PLO Executive Committee on Thursday night to discuss Israel’s plan to apply sovereignt­y to parts of the West Bank.

This would be the second meeting of its kind during the past few days to discuss the plan.

Earlier this week, Abbas chaired a meeting of the Fatah Central Council and again threatened to renounce all signed agreements with Israel in response to the annexation plan.

PLO Secretary-General Saeb Erekat said Thursday’s meeting would discuss the need to take a series of decisions to confront the Israeli plan. Erekat called on the internatio­nal community to prevent Israel from proceeding with its plan.

Separately, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under pressure from the settlers to move forward on the plans immediatel­y, particular­ly now that the High Court of Justice ruling that gave a stamp of approval for his premiershi­p.

Netanyahu should “announce in front of Knesset that he will now seek to promote the applicatio­n of Israeli law in Judea and Samaria,” Efrat Council head Oded Revivi said.

“This declaratio­n, alongside a written timeline, will result in a greater commitment from the new government that is forming. It is equally important for everyone to understand that the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y will occur,” he added.

“Netanyahu will speak in favor of the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y, and after his speech, an overwhelmi­ng majority of Knesset members will vote for it. This will mean that even in this political arena, both the national and internatio­nal communitie­s will internaliz­e and accept the Israeli decision that will come from the consensus of a broad government,” Revivi said.

The pressures comes on the heels of US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman suggesting the US was ready to back the plans and that negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority should resume.

“As a new government is formed, it would be appropriat­e for [support for the Trump plan] to be re-upped by the leader and then to proceed in good faith on that basis,” he told The Jerusalem Post earlier this week.

Friedman’s remarks drew attention in the US, as well. Martin Indyk, former ambassador to Israel and envoy to the Israeli-Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns, tweeted: “Pied Piper Friedman leading Israel off a cliff, with Bibi playing the big drum and [Blue and White leader] Bennie [Gantz] the timbrel and the rest of us too disillusio­ned or distracted to do anything about it.”

J Street, the progressiv­e Jewish group, similarly slammed Friedman. A J Street spokespers­on said “it’s been clear for years that Ambassador Friedman – a longtime benefactor and advocate for the settlement movement – sees it as his personal mission to encourage illegal, unilateral Israeli annexation in the West Bank.

“As he indicates in this interview, the entire Trump plan is simply a vehicle to provide an American green light annexation under the false pretense of supporting negotiatio­ns towards a two-state solution,” J Street spokespers­on added. “But no matter what [US President Donald] Trump and Friedman say, the truth is that annexation would be a disaster for the long-term interests of Israel and the United States–which is why it’s strongly opposed by the

Israeli security establishm­ent, the majority of Israelis and responsibl­e lawmakers here in the US.”

The Israel Policy Forum released a scathing statement as well. “We are disappoint­ed that Benny Gantz has agreed to this step as a condition for forming a unity government, not least because it is a departure from his previous statements and stances on the subject of West Bank annexation,” the statement read.

“We hope that the new Israeli government closely examines the potential consequenc­es of unilateral annexation and the deleteriou­s impact it will have on Israeli security and diplomacy and that it heeds the warnings against unilateral annexation that have come from Israeli security experts, the United States Congress, the European Union, foreign policy experts and American Jewish leaders,” the organizati­on added. “As Israel’s year of political instabilit­y now comes to a close, we urge Israel’s leaders not to take any steps that may put its future stability at risk.”

Lahav Harkov contribute­d to this report.

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 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? EFRAT. ‘It is important for everyone to understand that the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y will occur,‘ said Efrat Council head Oded Revivi.
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) EFRAT. ‘It is important for everyone to understand that the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y will occur,‘ said Efrat Council head Oded Revivi.

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