Gulf News

PNA: US attacking internatio­nal law

Palestinia­ns vow to reconsider cooperatio­n with Israel in the wake of PLO office closure

- PARIS

Palestinia­n Foreign Minister Riyad Al Maliki described yesterday President Donald Trump’s decision to halt US funding for the United Nations Palestinia­n refugee agency UNRWA as an attack on internatio­nal law.

Trump’s decision has left UNRWA trying to cover a $200 million shortfall from Gulf and European donors, and has further strained tensions between Washington and the Palestinia­n leadership.

“The US administra­tion has begun to attack the rights of the Palestinia­n people and internatio­nal law,” Al Maliki said at a meeting of the Arab League in Cairo. Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said that Amman would hold a meeting “in cooperatio­n with Sweden, Germany, Japan, the European Union and Turkey” on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly later this month “in an effort to get more aid”.

Meanwhile, the Palestinia­n National Authority vowed to reconsider its cooperatio­n with Israel as it again accused the US of taking sides in the stalled peace process. Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat said that the full range of political, economic and security ties would be reassessed in the wake of the US decision to shut the Palestinia­n mission in Washington.

We will continue to pursue Israel in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, Internatio­nal Court of Justice and United Nations General Assembly.”

Saeb Erekat | Palestinia­n official

Sealed with a handshake beamed across the world, the September 13, 1993, Oslo Accords were the first agreements between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns and promised to end decades of deadly conflict.

The deal’s architects - Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat, and Israel’s premier Yitzhak Rabin and foreign minister Shimon Peres — won the Nobel Peace Prize for “their efforts to create peace in the Middle East.”

The all-smiles image of Arafat shaking hands with Rabin was a moment of hope, but 25 years after that bright day in Washington, relations between the two sides have soured and the deal — which envisaged eventual Palestinia­n autonomy — is deadlocked.

Here is a look back at the landmark Oslo Accords.

In 1991, with a bloody Palestinia­n intifada against Israeli regime occupation having raged for four years, Washington and Moscow call a meeting in October in Madrid.

For the first time Israelis and Palestinia­ns sat around one table together, although via a Jordanian delegation as the Israeli regime refused the direct participat­ion of the Palestinia­n Liberation Organisati­on (PLO).

The meeting opened the path to Oslo: bilateral and multilater­al negotiatio­ns followed in various countries although there is no real progress until 1993.

In January 1993, the Israeli regime removed a major obstacle to further negotiatio­ns by lifting a 1986 ban forbidding Israeli contact with the PLO.

At the same time Norway offered to host fresh talks, guaranteei­ng utmost secrecy away from the media spotlight.

The first public sign of a breakthrou­gh came on August 29 when the regime announced a groundbrea­king agreement allowing limited Palestinia­n autonomy in parts of the Gaza Strip and West Bank, occupied by Israel. On September 10 that year, Israel for the first time officially recognised the PLO as the representa­tive of the Palestinia­n people.

These are the pillars of the Oslo Accords. The “Declaratio­n of Principles on Interim SelfGovern­ment Arrangemen­ts”, set to last five years, also stated that the Israeli regime and PLO will agree to work to end the conflict.

The deal was signed by its chief negotiator­s, Peres and PLO official Mahmoud Abbas, in Washington on September 13.

But the heroes of the day were Arafat and Rabin. Their handshake was hailed by many as a vital breakthrou­gh in a conflict that had already lasted nearly a half-century, but there was also criticism from Palestinia­n and Israeli quarters and some Arab countries.

In May 1994 the transition­al Palestinia­n autonomy began.

Two months later Arafat returned to the Occupied Territorie­s after 27 years in exile. He formed the Palestinia­n National Authority, to oversee the road to aspired Palestinia­n statehood.

In September the following year a new intermedia­ry accord, known as Oslo II, was signed, on the extension of the autonomy in the West Bank.

But on November 4, 1995, a right-wing Jewish extremist opposed to the accords assassinat­ed Rabin. It was seen as blow to the deal. The last direct - but ultimately fruitless - negotiatio­ns sponsored by the US took place in 2013. Twenty-five years on the Oslo Accords are deadlocked: the West Bank remains occupied while the Gaza Strip is under Israeli blockade.

 ?? Rex Features ?? King Hussain of Jordan, Rabin, US President Bill Clinton and Arafat at the ceremony of ‘Oslo II’ accord in Washington, D.C. on September 28, 1995.
Rex Features King Hussain of Jordan, Rabin, US President Bill Clinton and Arafat at the ceremony of ‘Oslo II’ accord in Washington, D.C. on September 28, 1995.

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