Gulf News

US exerted pressure on Israel to delay ‘annexation’ bill

PALESTINIA­NS FLAY THE LEGISLATIO­N, COUNT ON SUPPORT FROM THEIR ARAB BRETHREN

- BY JUMANA AL TAMIMI Associate Editor — With inputs from agencies

Hours before the vote in the Israeli Knesset yesterday to link the West Bank colonies to occupied Jerusalem, the US exerted pressure on the Israeli government to delay the vote because the move would change the reality on the ground, Israeli officials and Palestinia­n political scientists said.

Press reports quoted Likud Member of the Knesset David Bitan, who is also a close ally of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as telling Army Radio that the vote was delayed because “there is American pressure claiming this is [an] annexation”. Bitan said it will take time to clarify the bill to the US.

“Decisions ... of strategic importance [like this one] can’t be taken without American approval, even if that approval comes in the form of silence,” said Hunaida Ganem, General Director of Madar Centre in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

“America knows when to interfere and when not. When the issue is more rhetorical, it won’t move. But when the issue changes the reality, America does interfere,” the Harvard educated Ganem told Gulf News.

The bill amounts to de facto annexation of Israeli colonies around occupied Jerusalem, according to its opponents, as it will incorporat­e major Israeli colonies currently in the occupied West Bank into occupied Jerusalem, by expanding the city limits. From the perspectiv­e of the internatio­nal community, the fate of Israeli colonies in the West Bank will be decided in the final status talks of the stalled peace process between the Palestinia­ns and Israelis. However, according to the Israeli press and officials, it aims to bring 19 Jewish colonies under the city’s municipal jurisdicti­on, but not officially annex them.

“It aims to ensure a Jewish majority in the united city and to expand its borders by adding 150,000 residents to the area of a greater [occupied] Jerusalem,” Israeli Transporta­tion Minister Yisrael Katz said in a statement to reporters.

The fate of occupied East Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Arab-Israel war, is among the most sensitive issues in the peace talks. The Palestinia­ns insist on their right to make East Jerusalem the capital of their future state, while Israel has said that both East and West Jerusalem is its “eternal, united capital”.

Speaking to Gulf News hours before the news of the delay broke, senior Palestinia­n official Nabeel Shaath called the vote “a continuati­on of the Zionist, colonialis­t crime against our country, and especially [occupied] Jerusalem”.

“This is something we can’t stay silent on. We have contacted the Americans and all parties [concerned] to live up to their responsibi­lity,” said Shaath, who was the chief negotiator and is currently the head of the foreign relations branch of the ruling Fatah movement in the occupied West Bank.

Shaath, who recently returned from a trip to Europe, said the European Union, as well as Russia and China, support the Palestinia­n position.

“We are also counting on the position of our Arab brothers. This issue is very dangerous.”

The bill also excludes nearly 100,000 Palestinia­ns living in areas between Occupied Jerusalem and West Bank City of Ramallah, who are Jerusalemi­tes and hold Jerusalem identity cards. They are threatened with losing their rights in their own city.

“This is a real attack on occupied Jerusalem,” said Shaath.

Nationalis­tic contest

However, Ganem, who is a Palestinia­n from the 1948 areas, said the bill was part of ongoing competitio­n among right-wing politician­s in Israel on trying to bring in more “nationalis­tic” laws, especially given that Israel may have early elections, given corruption allegation­s against Netanyahu.

The bill passed the first stage of voting in the Knesset earlier, she said. Neverthele­ss, it became evident last week that a new article had been added, which speaks about the borders of “Greater Jerusalem”. It was this that caused the anger and controvers­y, Ganem explained.

The initial draft spoke only about the need to have twothirds Knesset majority — 80 out of 120 members — to change the 1980 Israeli law calling the city the eternal and united capital of Israel.

The major colony of Maaleh Adumim, east of occupied Jerusalem, will be among the areas absorbed into the expanded city limits under the draft legislatio­n, according to an explanator­y note issued by its sponsors.

The colonies mentioned, however, would not be fully annexed by Israel — at least not in the beginning — although Netanyahu pledged on a recent visit to Maaleh Adumim that it would at some point in time become part of the Jewish state.

Maaleh Adumim’s municipal boundaries include a contentiou­s area known as E1 adjacent to the colony. E1 and Maaleh Adumim form an Israeli buffer east of occupied Jerusalem that the Palestinia­ns say would divide the city from the West Bank, and badly hurt the possibilit­y of a contiguous Palestinia­n state.

Also incorporat­ed under the new bill would be the ultra-Orthodox Jewish colony of Beitar Illit, southwest of occupied Jerusalem, the Gush Etzion colony bloc to the south and Efrat and Givat Zeev colonies.

This is something we can’t stay silent on. We have contacted the Americans and all parties [concerned] to live up to their responsibi­lity” Nabeel Shaath (above)| Senior Palestinia­n official

 ??  ??
 ?? Rex Features ??
Rex Features

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates