European lawmakers urge action against Israel's 'de-facto annexation' of West Bank

Letter signed by 400 European politicians says Biden administration 'presents a chance to correct course' in Middle East diplomacy, calls on multi-national cooperation to 'prevent unilateral action undermining possibility of peace'

AFP|
More than 400 European parliamentarians have urged leaders to use Joe Biden's new presidency as an opportunity to stop what they term Israel's "de-facto annexation" of the West Bank.
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  • A letter seen by AFP was signed by 400 European politicians from across a range of backgrounds who serve in national legislatures and senates or in the European parliament.
    4 View gallery
    The West Bank settlement of Efrat
    The West Bank settlement of Efrat
    The West Bank settlement of Efrat
    (Photo: Reuters)
    Addressed to European foreign ministers and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, the letter argues that "the Biden administration presents a chance to correct course" in Middle East diplomacy.
    "The previous U.S. administration left the conflict farther away from peace than ever," it added.
    Former President Donald Trump broke with much of the international consensus concerning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
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    President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu during peace plan reveal
    President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu during peace plan reveal
    Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu during the reveal of his Mideast peace plan
    (Photo: EPA)
    Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel's "undivided capital" and moved Washington's embassy there, infuriating the Palestinians who claim the eastern part of the city as the capital of their future state.
    The State Department under Trump also said it no longer viewed Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank as illegal.
    Trump's widely criticized Middle East peace plan ear-marked parts of the West Bank for Israeli annexation.

    'Possibility of peace'

    While the Trump plan is dead, settlement expansion continues, with Israel regularly approving the construction of new homes for Jews on Palestinian territory.
    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a close Trump ally, agreed to pause West Bank annexation plans in exchange for the diplomatic normalization with the United Arab Emirates.
    "However, developments on the ground clearly point to a reality of rapidly progressing de facto annexation, especially through accelerated settlement expansion and demolitions of Palestinian structures," said the letter.
    4 View gallery
    Palestinian laborers work at a construction site in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem
    Palestinian laborers work at a construction site in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem
    Palestinian laborers work at a construction site in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem
    (Photo: AP)
    "Europe must work with the Biden administration, countries in the region and the parties on the ground to prevent unilateral action undermining the possibility of peace, advance the rights and security of all people under Israel's effective control."
    Israel gained control of the West Bank in the 1967 Six-Day War, during which it also seized control of east Jerusalem, an area it later annexed.
    The European Union insists any viable Israeli-Palestinian peace deal must be based on Israel's pre-1967 borders -- a condition rejected across much of the Israeli political spectrum.
    Biden has indicated his administration will restore U.S. opposition to West Bank settlements expansion, but he does not intend to move the U.S. embassy back to Tel Aviv.
    4 View gallery
    Members of the Hamas military wing in Gaza
    Members of the Hamas military wing in Gaza
    Members of Hamas' military wing in Gaza
    (Photo: EPA)
    The letter also said that Gaza, the jointly Egyptian and Israeli-blockaded Mediterranean enclave, "remains at risk of violent escalation at any moment", blaming both the blockade and "intra-Palestinian divisions".
    Hamas Islamists who have controlled Gaza since 2007 are long-standing rivals of Fatah secularists who dominate the Palestinian Authority, but the two sides are engaged in a unity push ahead of Palestinian elections called for later this year.
    "Palestinian reconciliation and elections across all the Palestinian territory is vital, including as a basis for ending the isolation of Gaza," the letter said.
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