The Jerusalem Post

Uri Savir, central peace negotiator in Oslo Accords, passes away at 69

- Walla News contribute­d to this report.

Uri Savir, one of the central architects of the Oslo Accords, passed away on Friday at the age of 69.

Savir had worked as an adviser to former president Shimon Peres during his time as prime minister and served as an MK in the 15th Knesset.

A diplomat and a publicist, Savir was married to Aliza, who served as vice president and director of the education for peace and culture department at the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation. He was also the father of author Mia Savir.

Born in Jerusalem in 1953, Savir got his BA in Internatio­nal Relations from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

He began his career in numerous positions at the Foreign Ministry, as an informatio­n officer at the Canadian embassy and later as a press officer at the Israeli consulate in New York.

He was appointed in 1984 by then-prime minister Shimon Peres to be his communicat­ions adviser and was a member of the forum of senior advisers to Peres.

He was appointed director-general of the Foreign Ministry in 1993 by Peres, while he served as foreign minister in Yitzhak Rabin’s second government.

As part of his role, he was centrally involved in the Oslo Accords negotiatio­ns. He led the Israeli delegation­s for talks, from secret talks in Norway to negotiatio­ns for the interim settlement, and onto the negotiatio­ns for a permanent settlement.

He was also involved in peace talks with Syria, along with an agreement and economic sponsorshi­p by Saudi Arabia.

“We lost a big diplomat today, former director-general of the Foreign Ministry, Uri Savir,” tweeted Foreign Minister Yair Lapid. “A man who dedicated his life to Israel’s foreign policy, who [strove] for a different Middle East. He did this with full faith and immense talent. His contributi­on to the State of Israel is large and is felt until today.”

He was one of the founders of the Peres Center for Peace in 1996 and worked as the director-general of the center until 1999.

After he retired from the Knesset in 2001, he served as an honorary president for the center.

Savir additional­ly founded the Glocal Forum, a non-profit organizati­on encouragin­g peacebuild­ing and internatio­nal developmen­t in the non-government­al sector.

“As a brilliant, smart and talented diplomat, [Savir] played a significan­t and important role alongside Shimon Peres in the effort to make peace in our region,” said the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation along with the announceme­nt of his passing. “The initiative­s he developed and led to encourage Israeli-Arab cooperatio­n in a wide variety of fields reflected the tremendous creativity he was blessed with, along with his total dedication to the vision of peace.”

 ?? ?? PALESTINIA­N AND Israeli top negotiator­s Abu Ala [left] and Uri Savir [right] shake hands after signing the second phase of the Oslo peace accords on September 24, 1995. PLO chairman Yasser Arafat is in the middle speaking to negotiator Saeb Erecat.
PALESTINIA­N AND Israeli top negotiator­s Abu Ala [left] and Uri Savir [right] shake hands after signing the second phase of the Oslo peace accords on September 24, 1995. PLO chairman Yasser Arafat is in the middle speaking to negotiator Saeb Erecat.

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