Abbas snubs US Vice President
Pence over Jerusalem move
NEWS / PALESTINE
OPINION
Trump on
Jerusalem: a
quintessential
Netanyahu
by Marwan
Bishara
READ MORE
Tense scenes as unrest
over US Jerusalem
move continues
Israeli–Palestinian conflict Palestine
United States Israel Middle East
Pence's Middle East visit involves stops in Egypt,
Israel and the occupied West Bank [Aaron P
Bernstein/Reuters]
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
will not meet US Vice President Mike
Pence during the latter's visit to the
region this month, Palestinian Foreign
Minister Riad Malki has said.
The snub over the US' recognition of
Jerusalem as Israel's capital came after
Egypt's Coptic Church on Saturday also
cancelled an upcoming meeting with
Pence in protest against Washington's
move on Jerusalem.
The policy change will also see the US
embassy to Israel move from Tel Aviv
to Jerusalem, a decision that has
sparked anger and protests throughout
the occupied Palestinian territories, and
drawn condemnation from world
leaders .
On Thursday, a day after US President
Donald Trump formally made the
announcement, Jibril Rajoub, a senior
Fatah politician, said, "we will not
receive him [Pence] in the Palestinian
territories".
Pence's visit to
the region
involves stops in
Egypt, Israel and
the West Bank,
the White House
said in October.
The vice
president was
scheduled to
meet Abbas in
Bethlehem on December 19.
"In the name of Fatah, I say that we will
not welcome Trump's deputy in the
Palestinian territories. He asked to meet
(Abbas) on the 19th of this month in
Bethlehem, such a meeting will not take
place," Rajoub said.
On Wednesday, as Trump made his
announcement, he spoke about Pence's
visit in his speech, with the vice
president at his side.
Trump gave a statement recognising Jerusalem
as the capital of Israel as he appeared with Vice
President Mike Pence at his side in the White
House on December 6 [Reuters/Jonathan Ernst]
"Vice President Pence will travel to the
region in the coming days to reaffirm
our commitment to work with partners
throughout the Middle East to defeat
radicalism that threatens the hopes and
dreams of future generations," Trump
said.
'Counterproductive'
A White House official, speaking on
condition of anonymity, told Al Jazeera
on Friday that Pence still "intends" to
meet Abbas, noting it "would be
counterproductive" for the Palestinian
leader to cancel the meeting.
Separately, Saeb Erekat, the Palestinian
chief negotiator said
Friday that Palestinians will not talk to
the US until Trump has reversed his
decision.
He said the Palestinian leadership was
considering all options in response to
Trump's announcement.
Trump's embassy move has inflamed
the Israel-Palestine conflict, in which
the status of Jerusalem is a key issue.
The Palestinians see occupied East
Jerusalem as the capital of their future
state.
In announcing the embassy move,
Trump said he remained "deeply
committed" to finding a peace
agreement, noting that the US "would
support a two-state solution if agreed to
by both sides".
Abbas recently met Jordan's King
Abdullah II, after which they issued a
joint statement noting that "any
measure tampering with the legal and
historical status of Jerusalem is invalid"
and warning of the "dangerous"
repercussions of the embassy move.
On Sunday,
violence erupted
for a fourth day
in the occupied
Palestinian
territories in
response to
Trump's announcement. Witnesses said
Israeli forces fired tear gas canisters at
groups of rallying youth in the Aida
refugee camp in Bethlehem.
The protests came after Israeli air raids
killed two Palestinians in Gaza on
Saturday after fighters reportedly fired
rockets from Gaza into Israel on Friday.
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