Arab News

Palestinia­ns, Jordan need ‘unified front’ for Biden presidency

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas meets Jordan’s King Abdullah in Aqaba, with the two leaders planning to travel together for a summit with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi

- Daoud Kuttab Amman

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas on Sunday met Jordan’s King Abdullah in Aqaba, with the two leaders planning to travel together for a summit with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi.

The region is preparing for the end of US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion and the arrival of President-elect Joe Biden and his team. Asma Khader, former Jordanian minister and government spokespers­on, said a unified position needed to be agreed on in order to face up to Israel.

“It is important to show that there is a strong Jordanian, Palestinia­n, Egyptian coalition interested in a peaceful resolution and that they are the key to the stability and tranquilit­y of the region,” she told Arab News. “What better day to show that unity than on the Internatio­nal Day of Solidarity with the Palestinia­n people.”

Relations between the US and the Palestinia­ns deteriorat­ed after Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, cut funding to a UN agency that assists Palestinia­n refugees, and threatened to withhold aid to the Palestinia­ns unless they resumed negotiatio­ns with Israel. He also unveiled a Middle East peace plan that sided with Israel on key contentiou­s issues including borders, the status of Jerusalem and Jewish settlement­s. In September the White House hosted the UAE and Bahrain for the signing of landmark normalizat­ion accords with Israel. Trump brokered the agreements, called the Abraham Accords, and hailed the moment as the “dawn of a new Middle East.”

Nabil Shaath, who is a senior political adviser to Abbas, said that the last days of the Trump era had seen “a frenzy of effort to force Arab and Muslim countries to normalize relations with Israel, a dan

gerous increase of Israeli settlement­s and a financial blockade” on Palestine.

“Our closest neighbors – Jordan and Egypt – must be involved in protecting the peace process from further deteriorat­ion,” he told Arab News.

Asaad Abdel Rahman, a former member of the PLO’s Executive Committee, agreed on the need for a united Arab front.

“After the earthquake that we have witnessed in the past four years, we need a strategy that can work with the new US administra­tion to move the process toward serious negotiatio­ns on the basis of what Jordan and Palestine have always publicly agreed to,” he told Arab News.

One key issue of agreement to be focused on was the 2014 Memorandum of Understand­ing between Jordan and the PLO regarding the Hashemite custodians­hip of Muslim and Christian holy places in Jerusalem, he said. In the

post-coronaviru­s period there was also a need for a joint economic plan to deal with the devastatio­n, he added.

Ali Jirbawi, a political science professor at Bir Zeit University, said that the Palestinia­n leadership and Jordan must work hard on cementing the situation in light of regional and internatio­nal changes. “There is a need to support the two-state solution which requires the creation of an independen­t Palestinia­n state,” he told Arab News. “The Palestinia­n leadership must be supported, the so-called Jordan option (that Jordan is Palestine) needs to be regularly rejected and the Hashemite role in protecting the holy places in Jerusalem must be publicly stated.”

Former Jordanian lawmaker Hind Al-Fayez said that all sides must be encouraged to carry out internal reforms.

“This includes Palestinia­n national unity as well as Jordanian serious structural political reform,” she told Arab News. “One area of priority for both parties is the need to preserve the Hashemite custodians­hip over the holy places in Jerusalem.”

Audeh Quawas, a newly appointed member of the Jordanian senate, said that Jordan and Palestine should work hand-in-hand.

“There is a clear need for a serious strategy that focuses on the creation of the Palestinia­n state based on internatio­nal law,” she told Arab News.

It is important to show that there is a strong Jordanian, Palestinia­n, Egyptian coalition interested in a peaceful resolution and that they are the key to the stability and tranquilit­y of the region.

Asma Khader Ex-Jordanian minister

 ?? AFP ?? Jordan’s King Abdullah II (R) and Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas (L) discussed on November 29, 2020, developmen­ts related to the Palestinia­n cause, in Aqaba.
AFP Jordan’s King Abdullah II (R) and Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas (L) discussed on November 29, 2020, developmen­ts related to the Palestinia­n cause, in Aqaba.

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