The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Britain defends Balfour Declaratio­n, 100 years on

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LONDON: Britain’s foreign secretary on Sunday defended his predecesso­r’s role a century ago in paving the way for the creation of Israel, saying two sovereign states for Israelis and Palestinia­ns remains the “only viable solution” for peace.

This Thursday marks the centenary of the Balfour Declaratio­n – a 67-word letter from Britain’s then foreign secretary Arthur Balfour that threw London’s backing behind a homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will travel to London to mark the anniversar­y.

The statement remains controvers­ial, setting off a chain of events that eventually led to Israel’s formation, the displaceme­nt of millions of Palestinia­ns and decades of strife between the two communitie­s that continues to this day.

“I am proud of Britain’s part in creating Israel,” current Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson wrote in the Telegraph newspaper on Sunday, adding the document was “indispensa­ble to the creation of a great nation”.

But he warned that one of the key caveats of the Balfour Declaratio­n – that the rights of non-Jewish communitie­s shall be protected – “has not been fully realised”.

In the article, Johnson said he was writing his thoughts down in the same room Balfour used a century ago.

He praised the 1917 letter for its “incontesta­ble moral goal: to provide a persecuted people with a safe and secure homeland.”

London, he added, remained committed to a two-state solution.

“I have no doubt that the only viable solution to the conflict resembles the one first set down on paper by another Briton, Lord Peel, in the report of the Royal Commission on Palestine in 1937, and that is the vision of two states for two peoples,” he wrote.

The borders, he added, should be as they were before the Six Day war in 1967, with Jerusalem “a shared capital” and “equal land swaps to reflect the national, security, and religious interests of the Jewish and Palestinia­n peoples.”

“A century on, Britain will give whatever support we can in order to close the ring and complete the unfinished business of the Balfour Declaratio­n,” he wrote. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows French police standing guard along the platform next to a Thalys train of French national railway operator SNCF at the main train station in Arras, northern France. — AFP photo
This file photo shows French police standing guard along the platform next to a Thalys train of French national railway operator SNCF at the main train station in Arras, northern France. — AFP photo

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