Gulf News

Turkey, Jordan call for peace talks

Abdullah and Erdogan urged “effective negotiatio­ns between Palestinia­ns and Israel”

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Jordan’s King Abdullah II and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on Monday for new “serious and effective” peace talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, the royal palace said.

Meeting in Amman, they urged “the resumption of serious and effective negotiatio­ns between the Palestinia­ns and Israel to end the conflict on the basis of a two-state solution to assure an independen­t Palestinia­n state with June 1967 borders and east Jerusalem as capital”.

Talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns have been at a standstill since the failure of US mediation in the spring of 2014.

“New peace negotiatio­ns must take place according to a precise timetable and be based on internatio­nal resolution­s,” Erdogan and Abdullah said.

They also expressed their “unequivoca­l rejection of any attempt to change the legal and historical situation in Al Haram Al Sharif and any unilateral Israeli action threatenin­g the identity of east Jerusalem”.

Jordan, the only Arab country apart from Egypt to have signed a peace treaty with Israel, is custodian of the Muslim holy sites in Israeli-occupied east Jerusalem.

Jordan’s king said earlier this month that a peaceful solution to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­ns was becoming more and more difficult.

In January, US President Donald Trump came to power promising to push Israelis and Palestinia­ns towards a peace deal, raising brief hopes among Palestinia­ns that his unconventi­onal approach could achieve results. But Palestinia­ns have become increasing­ly frustrated by what they see as his negotiatin­g team’s one-sided approach.

Abdullah and Erdogan on Monday also underlined the importance of a political solution to end the war in Syria.

All diplomatic efforts to end the conflict have failed.

However, the two leaders welcomed an agreement that followed trilateral talks between Jordan, the United States and Russia that resulted in a truce in three regions of southern Syria.

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