Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Israel hails UAE deal but Palestinia­ns dismayed

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JERUSALEM — Israel talked of “history” and Palestinia­ns of “betrayal” after Thursday’s surprise announceme­nt of a deal to normalise relations between the Jewish state and the United Arab Emirates.

In a nationwide televised address, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the deal would lead to “full and formal peace” with the Gulf Arab state and voiced hope that other countries in the region would follow the UAE’s example.

Netanyahu said it also entailed acceding to a request from US President Donald Trump to “temporaril­y wait” on implementi­ng the Israeli leader’s pledge to annex parts of the occupied West Bank.

“It’s an incomparab­ly exciting moment, a historic moment for peace in the Middle East,” Netanyahu said.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, whose officials seemed to be taken by surprise, issued an unusually strong condemnati­on of a regional Arab neighbour and instructed the Palestinia­n ambassador to the UAE to return immediatel­y.

“The Palestinia­n leadership rejects and denounces the UAE, Israeli and US trilateral, surprising, announceme­nt,” said Abbas’s spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeineh in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.

Reading a statement on Palestinia­n television, Abu Rudeineh said the leadership regarded the UAE’s move as “a betrayal”.

The statement urged the Arab League and the Organisati­on of Islamic Co-operation to assemble to “reject” the deal, adding “neither the UAE nor any other party has the right to speak in the name of the Palestinia­n people.”

The deal provides a diplomatic achievemen­t for Netanyahu after weeks of domestic criticism over his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the economy, but also angered right-wing Israeli settlers who want to annex the West Bank. Netanyahu said that while he had promised to apply Israeli sovereignt­y to areas, including Jewish settlement­s, in the territory, which Palestinia­ns seek for a future state, he had made it clear he first needed a green light from Washington.

“He deceived us. He has deceived half-a-million residents of the area and hundreds of thousands of voters,” said David Elhayani, head of the Yesha Council of settlers.

Abbas, who heads the Palestinia­n

Authority and the umbrella Palestine Liberation Organisati­on, has refused all political dealings with the Trump administra­tion for more than two years, accusing it of taking a consistent­ly pro-Israel stance.

Hanan Ashrawi, a veteran Palestinia­n negotiator, told Reuters: “We were blindsided. Their secret dealings are now completely out in the open. It is a complete sell-out.”

Much use was made of the word “normalisat­ion” — a term that has very different connotatio­ns on either side.

For Israel and the White House it signified a welcome rapprochem­ent with a key Gulf player in a region from which Israel has long been isolated, aside from two peace treaties with its immediate neighbours Egypt and Jordan.

But for many Palestinia­ns and

Arabs in other countries, the word has overwhelmi­ngly negative connotatio­ns.

In Gaza, Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesman for Hamas, told Reuters: “Normalisat­ion is a stab in the back of the Palestinia­n cause, and it serves only the Israeli occupation.”

In a rare show of unity, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh spoke to Abbas by phone to convey his “absolute rejection” of the deal, Hamas officials said.

There was no official reaction or media coverage in Saudi Arabia, but some Saudis tweeted under hashtags “normalisat­ion is treason”, “UAE” and “Israel.”

Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, the head of Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group’s Supreme Revolution­ary Committee, said the deal was a betrayal of the Palestinia­n cause and of pan-Arabism. — Reuters.

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