donderdag 14 januari 2010

Netanjahoe wil Jeruzalem niet met Palestijnen delen

 
Het is de vraag of Netanjahoe de mogelijkheid uitsluit dat bepaalde Arabische wijken, waar Joden nooit enige connectie mee hebben gehad, onder Palestijns bestuur kunnen komen. Het gaat hem waarschijnlijk vooral om de oude stad, enkele wijken die eromheen liggen die nu Arabisch worden genoemd (Silwan, Sheikh Jarrah) maar waar in het verleden ook Joden woonden, en waar een deel van het oude Joodse verleden van Jeruzalem ligt (nog uit de tijd van de eerste tempel). In het licht van de aanhoudende Arabische propaganda over 'Arabisch Oost Jeruzalem', waar zoals Ami hieronder zegt, de hele oude stad wordt verstaan, is het begrijpelijk dat Israel zich ook onverzoenlijk opstelt.
 
RP
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Netanyahu: Israel will never share Jerusalem with Palestinians

"Never" is a long time. Benjamin Netanyahu won't be around forever, and he is not omnipotent. Walking on water is reserved for the current president of the United States. Perhaps Mr Netanyahu would have been wiser to confine his remarks about Jerusalem to refuting the obnoxious Arab propaganda slogan, "Arab Jerusalem" and to insisting that Arabs will have to recognize some Jewish national rights in East Jerusalem. If not in "Arab East Jerusalem" then in Jewish East Jerusalem. "Arab Jerusalem is meant to include the entire Old City that is holy to Jews, and that had a Jewish community for hundreds of years before 1948 as well as being the ancient capital of Israel. The term is obnoxious because it assumes the truth of fanciful Arab propaganda claiming that Jews did not rule in Jerusalem in ancient times. It is the basis of apartheid Arab insistence on re-instituting the racist ethnic cleansing of Jews from Jerusalem that was perpetrated in 1948. A war crime cannot be the basis of a peace treaty.
 
Ami Isseroff
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Last update - 11:52 12/01/2010       
Netanyahu: Israel will never share Jerusalem with Palestinians
By Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondent, and Agencies

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on Tuesday that Israel would never cede control of united Jerusalem nor retreat to the 1967 borders, according to a bureau statement.
 
The statement came after Egypt's foreign minister said in Cairo last week that Netanyahu was ready to discuss making "Arab Jerusalem" the capital of a Palestinian state.
 
Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority could abandon its demand for a freeze on construction in East Jerusalem in exchange for an easing of the siege on Gaza and a halt to Israeli assassinations in the West Bank.
 
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit met the foreign ministers of Egypt, France, Jordan, Spain and Tunisia in Cairo last week to revive the nascent Mediterranean Union. He briefed them about Netanyahu's talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak a few days earlier, Israeli and European officials said.

Aboul Gheit reportedly said Israel's willingness to give the Palestinians "100 percent of the West Bank" and the readiness to discuss Arab Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine indicate "openness, goodwill and a change compared to the past."
 
According to the Arab foreign ministers, the Palestinians have agreed to waive their conditions for reopening the negotiations with Israel in exchange for other terms that Netanyahu could accept more easily.
 
The Palestinians previously had demanded a complete freeze on construction in East Jerusalem and resuming talks from the point they left off. Now their conditions are Israel stopping its assassinations and military operations in Palestinian cities; easing the blockade on the Gaza Strip and bringing in construction material to enable Gaza's rehabilitation; rezoning West Bank areas where Palestinians have full authority (A) and where they have only civil authority (B) - meaning, having the Israel Defense Forces withdraw to where it was before the Al-Aqsa intifada in September 2000; releasing certain Palestinian prisoners to the PA; and removing eight specific roadblocks in the West Bank.
 
If Israel agrees to these terms, the Palestinians will return to the negotiations even if the building in East Jerusalem continues and the talks do not pick up where they left off.
 
Aboul Gheit said the United States would issue a statement against Israeli construction in East Jerusalem and expressing its commitment to the territory of the future Palestinian state.
 
The visiting foreign ministers agreed that the difficulty in resuming the talks is due to Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' refusal to announce their new positions publicly.
 

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