The Mercury News

U.N. says Israelis, Palestinia­ns imperil two-state solution

Both sides erode confidence in peace recommenda­tions

- By Michael Astor Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Political leaders on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict continue to shy away from the steps needed for peace, further eroding the prospect of a two-state solution, the United Nations’ Mideast envoy said Monday.

Nicolay Mladenov told the Security Council that illegal settlement expansion by Israelis and the lack of Palestinia­n Authority control in Gaza remain among the biggest obstacles to peace.

Mladenov called for a “radical overhaul of how we deal with the problems of Gaza,” and said the area “remains in the grip of militants, and dependent on aid and humanitari­an assistance.”

He also flagged “a surge in Israeli settlement-related announceme­nts and demolition­s,” since the Quartet of Mideast peace negotiator­s — the United States, Russia, the European Union and the U.N. — issued their report which aimed to restart Israeli-Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns which have been dormant since 2014, when a U.S. peace initiative failed.

“It has been nearly two months since the Middle East Quartet spoke clearly of the threats to the twostate solution and offered practical recommenda­tions to enable an eventual return to meaningful negotiatio­ns to end the occupation that began in 1967,” Mladenov said. “Its recommenda­tions continue to be ignored.”

Since July 1, Israel has advanced the constructi­on of over 1,700 housing units in the occupied West Bank, including in East Jerusalem, Mladenov said.

The Israeli government is also undertakin­g a survey to identify potential “state land” in sensitive areas, something Mladenov said could “enable the establishm­ent of a new settlement on the outskirts of Bethlehem.”

“All these plans would essentiall­y create new illegal settlement­s and I call on Israel to cease and reverse these decisions,” he said.

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