Israel

UN Chief: Israeli-Palestinian Peace Prospects Under Threat

Ban Ki-moon said that events in recent years — including two unsuccessful attempts to negotiate a settlement and armed conflict — have left Palestinians and Israelis alike frustrated and disillusioned

Ban Ki-moon, whose 10-year tenure as U.N. secretary-general ends in a month, said Tuesday that the international community must make clear that it remains committed to peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians because the prospects of an agreement are "threatening to slip out of reach." 

Ban, bemoaning a lack of progress in peace negotiations during his tenure as the top U.N. official, released a statement prior to a meeting of the 193-member U.N. General Assembly on the conflict. He said that events in recent years — including two unsuccessful attempts to negotiate a settlement and armed conflict — have left Palestinians and Israelis alike frustrated and disillusioned. 

"It has strengthened radicals and weakened moderates on both sides," he said. "Making matters worse is a dangerous vacuum within the international community as crises elsewhere claim the attention of world leaders." 

The General Assembly meeting came on the U.N.'s annual "International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People." 

The Palestinians want the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem — areas Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war — for their future state, but nearly 600,000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. 

Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian U.N. ambassador, has said that a cessation of all Israeli settlement activities and an end to its nearly 50-year occupation of Palestinian territory are necessary for a comprehensive peace agreement.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected those terms saying negotiations should take place without conditions. The Israelis have argued that groupings of settlements known as "blocs," where a majority of settlers live, should remain in Israel under any peace deal with the Palestinians, with other smaller settlements deeper in the West Bank relinquished. 

In September, the international diplomatic "quartet" of Mideast peacemakers called for Israel and the Palestinians to take steps to resume stalled peace talks. At a meeting on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, the top diplomats of the European Union, Russia, United Nations and United States urged the parties to create conditions for restarting "meaningful" negotiations toward a two-state solution. 

Danny Danon, Israel's U.N. ambassador, criticized the General Assembly during Tuesday's meeting, saying members bash Israel every year over the issue of the Israel-Palestinian conflict even though he said the Palestinians' commitment to negotiating an agreement is questionable. 

"Every year, on this date, this chamber holds this same, cynical, Israel-bashing festival," he said. "Every year, we hear speaker after speaker distorting history and promoting a completely one-sided narrative." 

Mansour told the General Assembly he hoped that by next year's International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People a lasting solution could be found.

"This may sound like wishful thinking, considering the harsh realities that overwhelm us and the fatigue felt by the international community after so many years of conflict, setbacks and tragedy," he said. "Yet, this remains our primary, overarching objective." 

Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson, reflecting on the state of the Israel-Palestinian conflict, said in a statement that the admission of Palestine to the United Nations as a non-member Observer State in 2012 was a historic milestone during his and Ban's tenure.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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