Sowetan

Palestinia­ns fear Israeli election result means more violence

Netanyahu makes comeback in poll

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Gaza/West Bank – The prospect of Benjamin Netanyahu returning to power at the head of one of the most right-wing coalitions in Israeli history has prompted concern among Palestinia­ns, who said they feared it was a prelude to further escalation of conflict with Israel.

Netanyahu’s comeback in Tuesday’s election is set against the backdrop of the deadliest spell of violence in years between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, whose hopes of statehood appear as distant as ever with Middle East peacemakin­g in the doldrums.

More than 100 Palestinia­ns from the Israeli-occupied West Bank have been killed by Israeli forces this year while a string of fatal street attacks by Palestinia­ns has killed 20 people in Israel.

Palestinia­n officials in the West Bank and Gaza Strip said the ultra-nationalis­t complexion of Netanyahu’s likely alliance, including the firebrand Itamar Ben-Gvir, who once advocated expelling Palestinia­ns, prompted concern over further tension.

“No doubt the result of such a coalition will increase the hostile attitude towards the Palestinia­n people and make occupation measures more extreme,” Bassam Salhe, a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on, told Reuters.

The Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas, which has fought several wars with Israel over the past decade, predicted the results meant more potential violence. “It is clear that the Israelis are leaning towards more extremism, which also means aggression against our people would increase,” Hamas spokespers­on Hazem Qassem said.

Netanyahu has long opposed the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel.

Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas, who has built his career around trying to negotiate peace with Israel, did not mention the election in a speech to an Arab summit on Wednesday. But he aired his previously stated view that Israel was “systematic­ally destroying the two-state solution”, a reference to settlement expansion on territory Palestinia­ns seek for their state.

Negotiatio­ns stalled in 2014. While negotiatio­ns have been at a standstill, Abbas has met defence minister Benny Gantz to calm tensions and coordinate security measures, and welcomed prime minister Yair Lapid’s call in September for a two-state solution.

Reham Owda, a political analyst in Gaza, said the peace process and the Palestinia­n Authority, in particular, may be the prime loser of a Netanyahu comeback, given his “personal enmity with ... Abbas and his opposition to the two-state solution.”

“With Netanyahu, the slogan will be no peace, no two-state solution, more settlement and the focus will be on Iran,” she said.

In the latest West Bank violence, Israeli troops shot dead a Palestinia­n man on Wednesday after a suspected car-ramming attack at a checkpoint that left a soldier severely injured, Palestinia­n and Israeli officials said.

Many Palestinia­ns, including refugees in Jordan and Lebanon, said they saw no difference between Netanyahu and other Israeli politician­s when it comes to their policies towards the Palestinia­ns.

“Certainly the situation is going to move from bad to worse. He will continue from where his predecesso­r left,” said Khaled Shriteh, 29, a Ramallah taxi driver.

“For us, right and left parties are the same, both are our enemies,” said Jamal Mansour, a Palestinia­n refugee in Bourj al-Barajneh camp in Beirut.

Violence also flared in Gaza in August. At least 49 people including 17 kids were killed in 56 hours of fighting that started with what Israel described as preemptive air strikes against the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad group, which fired hundreds of missiles into Israel during the flare-up.

 ?? / REUTERS ?? A man holds a young girl in the area of a stabbing incident by a Palestinia­n man in Jerusalem yesterday.
/ REUTERS A man holds a young girl in the area of a stabbing incident by a Palestinia­n man in Jerusalem yesterday.

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