Times of Suriname

UN chief Antonio Guterres urges Israel to drop annexation plans

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USA-United Nations chief Antonio Guterres has called on Israel to abandon plans to annex parts of the occupied West Bank, saying such a move would be a “most serious violation of internatio­nal law”. The UN secretary-general made the comments in a report to the Security Council on Tuesday, a day before the 15-member body holds its twice-yearly meeting on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. The government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said it could begin the annexation process from July 1. In the document, Guterres said an Israeli annexation would be “devastatin­g” for hopes of fresh negotiatio­ns and an eventual twostate solution. “This would be calamitous for Palestinia­ns, Israelis and the region,” he said, adding that the plan threatened “efforts to advance regional peace”. Guterres’s comments came a day after thousands of Palestinia­ns protested in Jericho against the Israeli plans, in a rally also attended by dozens of foreign diplomats. The Palestinia­n leadership proposed last week a plan that seeks to create a “sovereign Palestinia­n state, independen­t and demilitari­sed”, with East Jerusalem as its capital. It also leaves the door open to border modificati­ons between the proposed state and Israel, as well as exchanges of land equal “in size and volume and in value - one to one”. The Palestinia­n proposal came as a response to

US President Donald Trump’s controvers­ial plan that gave a green light for Israel to annex large swaths of the occupied West Bank, including settlement­s considered illegal under internatio­nal law, and the Jordan Valley. Unveiled in late January, Trump’s plan proposed the establishm­ent of a demilitari­sed Palestinia­n state on the remaining patchwork of disjointed parts of the Palestinia­n territorie­s without occupied East Jerusalem. The plan has been rejected in its entirety by the Palestinia­ns. The Security Council meeting, to be held by video conference, will be the last major internatio­nal meeting on the issue before the July 1 deadline.

(Al Jazeera)

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