Trump tells Abbas he will move
US embassy to Jerusalem
NEWS / PALESTINE
WATCH: What message
is Trump sending with
plan to relocate
embassy?
Israeli–Palestinian conflict Palestine
Donald Trump Middle East
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Abbas gave Trump warning of "dangerous
consequences" of such a move [File: Getty
Images]
US President Donald Trump has told
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas that
he intends to relocate the US
embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem, according to Palestinian
officials.
Wafa, the official news agency of the
Palestinian Authority (PA), reported on
Tuesday that Trump called Abbas to
inform him of his "intention".
"President Abbas warned of the
dangerous consequences such a
decision would have to the peace
process and to the peace, security and
stability of the region and of the
world," Nabil Abu Rudeina, the
Palestinian president's spokesperson,
said.
No further details were given about
when Trump plans to move the
embassy.
Shortly after, a statement by the
Jordanian royal palace said Trump had
also called King Abdullah II to inform
him about his intention to move the
embassy to Jerusalem.
The statement said the king warned
Trump the relocation would have
"dangerous repercussions on the
stability and security of the region" and
would also inflame Muslim and
Christian feelings.
No embassy in Jerusalem
Jerusalem's status is an extremely
sensitive aspect of the Israeli-
Palestinian conflict.
Israel claims the city as its capital,
following the occupation of East
Jerusalem in the 1967 war with Syria,
Egypt and Jordan, and considers
Jerusalem to be a "united" city.
Palestinians have long seen East
Jerusalem as the capital of their future
state.
They say that a US move to relocate the
embassy would prejudge one of the
most sensitive issues in the conflict -
the status of Jerusalem - and undermine
Washington's status as an honest
mediator.
No country currently has its embassy in
Jerusalem, and the international
community, including the US, does not
recognise Israel's jurisdiction over and
ownership of the city.
'Red line'
In recent days, senior Palestinian
officials warned of the potentially
destructive effects of any move denying
their claim to occupied East Jerusalem
as the capital of their future state.
Saeb Erekat, the secretary-general of
the Palestine Liberation
Organization, said this week he had
spoken to Arab leaders, who relayed
the message "that Jerusalem is a red
line, not just for Palestinians but for
Arabs, Muslims and Christians
everywhere".
During his election campaign last year,
Trump repeatedly promised to move
the embassy and recognise Jerusalem as
the Israeli capital.
In June, however, like his predecessors,
Trump signed a six-month waiver to
delay the relocation, which would have
complicated US efforts to resume the
long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace
talks.
"Every US president for more than 20
years has recognised that this could
have cataclysmic results and
repercussions if it were to happen," Al
Jazeera's Kimberly Halkett, reporting
from Washington, DC, said.
A number of
world leaders
have sharply
criticised such a
relocation,
fearing it would
further escalate
regional
tensions.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
on Tuesday threatened to cut
diplomatic ties with Israel over reports
that the US plans to recognise
Jerusalem as the Israeli capital.
Such a move would be a "red line" for
Muslims, he said.
French President Emmanuel Macron
told Trump by telephone that
Jerusalem's status must be decided in
peace talks between Israelis and
Palestinians.
Also on Tuesday, the Arab League held
an emergency meeting to discuss
developments on the status of
Jerusalem, following a request by
Palestinian officia.
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