Business Day

Arab summit unites over US’s Golan Heights move

- Ulf Laessing Tunis

Arab leaders papered over longrunnin­g regional rivalries on Sunday to condemn a US move to recognise Israel’s sovereignt­y over the Syrian Golan Heights and said stability in the Middle East hinged on creating a Palestinia­n state.

Arab leaders, attending a summit in the Tunisian capital, have been grappling with regional splits over Iran’s influence in the Middle East, a bitter Gulf Arab dispute, internatio­nal pressure over the war in Yemen and unrest in Algeria and Sudan.

But they have found a reason to unite against President Donald Trump’s decision to sign a proclamati­on last week recognisin­g the Golan Heights as part of Israel, which annexed the area in 1981 after capturing it from Syria in 1967.

It follows a US move less than four months ago to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, a decision that also prompted Arab condemnati­on.

Palestinia­ns want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state in the West Bank and Gaza.

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz told Arab monarchs, presidents and prime ministers at the start of the summit that his country “absolutely rejects” any measures that affect Syria’s sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights.

His remarks echoed those of senior Arab officials before Sunday’s summit of the Arab League, which usually ends with a final declaratio­n agreed by the 22 member states.

Tunisia President Beji Caid Essebsi said Arab leaders also needed to ensure the internatio­nal community understood the importance of the Palestinia­n cause to Arab nations.

Regional and internatio­nal stability should come through “a just and comprehens­ive settlement that includes the rights of the Palestinia­n people and leads to the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state with Jerusalem as its capital,” Essebsi said.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres, who addressed the meeting in Tunis, said any resolution to the Syrian conflict must guarantee the territoria­l integrity of Syria “including the occupied Golan Heights”.

Summit spokespers­on Mahmoud al-Khmeiry said before the summit that Arab states would also repeat a call offering peace with Israel in exchange for occupied Arab lands and would reject any initiative not in line with UN resolution­s.

Khmeiry appeared to be referring to a still unannounce­d US peace plan by Trump son-inlaw and White House adviser Jared Kushner that Palestinia­ns have refused to discuss.

Despite a show of unity, Arab states remain divided over a range of other issues, including pro-democracy protests and Iran’s Middle East influence.

King Salman, whose country has long vied with Iran for influence, called for confrontin­g what he called the “aggressive policies of the Iranian regime”. He said Iran was interferin­g in Arab affairs, a charge Tehran has long denied.

The Tunis summit brought together the rulers of Saudi Arabia and Qatar for the first time at the same gathering since 2017, when Riyadh and its allies imposed a political and economic boycott on Doha.

The leaders of Sudan and Algeria did not attend Sunday’s meeting, with both nations roiled by antigovern­ment protests. Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Omar al-Bashir both face calls to step down.

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