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Israel sets terms for Palestinian state
BayBak, Azerbaijan | Sunday, 14th June , 2009 , 23:05 [pm] | International
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. | “He reduced the concept of a Palestinian state to that of a demilitarised entity that would remain under Israeli control.
“This is at best a formula to establish a Palestinian Bantustan that will not end the Israeli occupation but would legitimise Israeli control.” |
According to BBC, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has announced he will back a Palestinian state – but only if it is completely demilitarised.
He said a Palestinian state must have no army, no control of its air space and no way of smuggling in weapons.
In a landmark speech, weeks after the US president urged him to agree a two-state plan, he said the Palestinians must accept Israel as a Jewish state.
Palestinian leaders reacted angrily, accusing him of sabotaging peace plans.
Settlers ‘not enemies’
The White House said President Barack Obama welcomed Mr Netanyahu’s “endorsement” of a two-state solution as an “important step forward”.
The BBC’s Paul Wood says Mr Netanyahu broke ground by accepting the principle of a demilitarised Palestinian state, albeit with conditions.
But our correspondent says the question is whether the White House regards this as sufficient to make up for the lack of movement on the issue of Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Mr Obama has stressed that he wants all settlement activity to stop.
But in his speech at Bar-Ilan university Mr Netanyahu said settlers were not “enemies of peace” and did not move from his position of backing “natural growth” in existing settlements.
Thorny issues
The Israeli leader offered to talk to the Palestinians immediately and with “no preconditions”.
“We want to live with you in peace as good neighbours,” he said.
Mr Netanyahu also said he was willing to go to Damascus, Riyadh and Beirut in pursuit of a Middle East peace deal.
He went on to tackle the major stumbling blocks in negotiations with Palestinians over the years.
Not least was the issue of Palestinian refugees who fled or were forced from their homes in what is now Israel in 1948 and 1949.
The Palestinians say they and their millions of descendants have the right to return to Israel – which would mean an end to its Jewish majority – but Israel has consistently rebuffed that demand.
Mr Netanyahu stuck to a similar line, saying: “The Palestinian refugee problem must be resolved outside the borders of the state of Israel.
“Any demand to resettle refugees within Israel undermines Israel as a state for the Jewish people.”
Another key issue the two sides have failed to agree on is the status of Jerusalem.
Mr Netanyahu insisted the city must be the “united capital of Israel”, although Palestinians want it divided to allow them to locate the capital of a future state there.
Agreeing the principle of a Palestinian state, he said Israel would “be prepared for a true peace agreement [and] to reach a solution of a demilitarised Palestinian state alongside the Jewish state”.
But only if “we receive this guarantee for demilitarisation and the security arrangements required by Israel, and if the Palestinians recognise Israel as the nation of the Jewish people”.
‘Racist and extremist’
Nabil Abu Rdainah, a spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, said the Israeli leader’s speech “torpedoes all peace initiatives in the region”.
Another Abbas aide, Yasser Abed Rabbo, told the AFP news agency that recognition of Israel’s Jewish character was a demand for Palestinians “to become part of the global Zionist movement”.
While the militant Hamas movement, which controls the Gaza Strip, said the speech reflected Mr Netanyahu’s “racist and extremist ideology”.
Palestinian reaction
According to Aljazeera, But the Palestinian Authority based in Ramallah in the West Bank reacted angrily to Netanyahu’s demands.
Nabil Abu Rdainah, a spokesman for Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, dismissed the speech, saying: “Netanyahu’s remarks have sabotaged all initiatives, paralysed all efforts being made and challenges the Palestinian, Arab and American positions.”
Saeb Erekat, the Palestinians’ senior negotiator, called on Obama to intervene to force Israel to abide by previous interim agreements that include freezing settlement activity in the West Bank.
“The peace process has been moving at the speed of a tortoise. Tonight, Netanyahu has flipped it over on its backm,” he said.
This is the first occasion that Netanyahu has endorsed the creation of a Palestinian state, but many see a disarmed Palestinian state as handing too much power to Israel.
“Netanyahu did not accept the principle of a two-state solution,” Lamis Andoni, Al Jazeera’s Middle East analyst, said.
“He reduced the concept of a Palestinian state to that of a demilitarised entity that would remain under Israeli control.
“This is at best a formula to establish a Palestinian Bantustan that will not end the Israeli occupation but would legitimise Israeli control.”
, Voice of a Nation
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