Times of Oman

Israel summons foreign ambassador­s after UN vote

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OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: Israel summoned the ambassador­s of 10 nations to occupied Jerusalem to reprimand them on Sunday and had more harsh words for the Obama administra­tion over a UN Security Council resolution demanding an end to settlement­building.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put his personal imprint on the show of anger by repeating at the weekly cabinet meeting what an unidentifi­ed Israeli government official contended on Friday - that Washington had conspired with the Palestinia­ns to push for the resolution’s adoption. The White House has denied the allegation.

US abstains

The vote passed in the 15-member Security Council on Friday because the United States broke with its long-standing approach of diplomatic­ally shielding Israel and did not wield, as a permanent member of the forum, its veto power, instead abstaining.

“According to our informatio­n, we have no doubt the Obama administra­tion initiated it (the resolution), stood behind it, coordinate­d the wording and demanded it be passed,” Netanyahu told the cabinet in public remarks.

Ambassador­s from 10 of the 14 countries that voted in favour of the resolution and have embassies in Israel - Britain, China, Russia, France, Egypt, Japan, Uruguay, Spain, Ukraine and New Zealand - were summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, the ministry said.

Unusual

Sunday is a regular work day in Israel, but most embassies are closed, and calling in envoys on Christmas Day is highly unusual.

At the weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday, Netanyahu described a telephone conversati­on with US Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday, when Israel and President-elect Donald Trump successful­ly pressed Egypt to drop the anti-settlement resolu- tion it had put forward. It was resubmitte­d a day later by New Zealand, Senegal, Venezuela and Malaysia. “Over decades American administra­tions and Israeli government­s disagreed about settlement­s, but we agreed that the security council was not the place to resolve this issue,” Netanyahu said.

“We knew that going there would make negotiatio­ns harder and drive peace farther away. As I told John Kerry on Thursday, ‘Friends don’t take friends to the Security Council’,” he said, switching from Hebrew to English. Israel has pursued a policy of constructi­ng settlement­s on territory it captured in a 1967 war - the occupied West Bank, Gaza and occupied East Jerusalem, areas Palestinia­ns seek for a state.

Most countries view the settlement activity as illegal and an obstacle to peace. Israel disagrees, citing historical connection­s to the occupied West Bank and occupied Jerusalem as well as security interests.

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