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![]() by Staff Writers Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 27, 2014
Comments by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the World Economic Forum make it clear he opposes the establishment of a Palestinian state, chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat has said. "Anyone who says they want the settlers to remain is actually saying they don't want the establishment of a Palestinian state," Erakat said in remarks published Monday in Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam. Erakat was reacting to remarks by Netanyahu at last week's WEF gathering in Davos, where he insisted Israel would not evacuate Jewish settlements built on occupied land the Palestinians want for their future state. Netanyahu has publicly supported the two-state solution during US-sponsored talks which envisage the creation of a Palestinian state as part of a final peace agreement. But at Davos, the premier told Israeli journalists at a briefing, "I have said before and I say again; I do not intend to dismantle any settlement, I don't intend to uproot any Israeli." His comments were broadcast on public radio. Israel's settlements, which are illegal under international law, are a key sticking point that is preventing peace talks from making any visible progress. Some Israeli media said Netanyahu was speaking in response to a question specifically about the Jordan Valley, the part of the occupied West Bank bordering Jordan. Israel insists on maintaining a long-term military presence in the valley as a buffer against attacks on the Jewish state, while the Palestinians want an international security force deployed there for their own security. But angry Israeli hardliners on Monday linked Netanyahu's Davos comments to a report that the premier is floating the idea of existing settlements being leased from the Palestinians in a future Palestinian state. "We do not leave settlers behind enemy lines," deputy defence minister Danny Danon, a hawkish member of Netanyahu's own Likud party, told army radio. "It's an idea of leaving Jews, abandoning Jews to the control of the Palestinians," deputy foreign minister Zeev Elkin, also of Likud, told the station. "It's a red line, contrary to the beliefs of the national camp, the beliefs of the Likud." Palestinian officials also opposed the idea of settlers remaining inside Palestinian territory. There would be "no agreement with Israel if there is so much as one settler on the soil of a future Palestinian state," said former Palestinian negotiator Mohammed Shtayyeh, who resigned in November over Israel's settlement expansion. "Netanyahu wants to replace occupation by force with occupation by consent," he said of the leasing idea. Settler leader Dani Dayan told AFP the concept of settlements no longer being under Israeli sovereignty was a "political, security and Zionist aberration". Analyst Shimon Shiffer said the report of the leasing plan, which Netanyahu's office has neither confirmed nor denied, was a deliberate attempt to draw a hostile response from the Palestinians, painting them as rejecting peace. "Netanyahu... is trying to push the settlers into a corner and challenge the Palestinian side, knowing that the latter will reply with a resounding negative," he wrote in Yediot. Maariv's Shalom Yerushalmi suggested the premier was playing for time. "The settlements will certainly be removed, but the prime minister will not be the one to remove them," he wrote. "This will be a gradual process in any case, and by the time we reach the removal of the settlements Netanyahu will no longer be there."
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