Palestinian president accuses Israel of undermining peace efforts

Authority no longer bound by the accords signed in 1990s, says Mahmoud Abbas

The Palestinian flag flies beside the flag of the United Nations after being raised by President Mahmoud Abbas. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters
The Palestinian flag flies beside the flag of the United Nations after being raised by President Mahmoud Abbas. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters

Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas yesterday accused Israel of sabotaging US efforts to broker peace and said that Israeli security operations at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem could lead to a religious war.

In an address to the United Nations General Assembly before a ceremony for the raising of the Palestinian flag at UN headquarters in New York, Mr Abbas said the Palestinian Authority no longer considered itself bound by the accords signed with Israel in the mid-1990s.

Repeating what the Palestinian Authority has been saying for at least half a decade, Mr Abbas said the agreements would not apply as long as Israel supports settlements of Israelis in the West Bank and refuses to release Palestinian prisoners.

"You are all aware that Israel undermined the efforts made by the administration of President Barack Obama in past years, most recently the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry aimed at reaching a peace agreement through negotiations," Mr Abbas told the 193-nation General Assembly.

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Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s office said in response that Mr Abbas’s speech was “deceitful and encourages incitement and lawlessness in the Middle East”.

“We expect and call on the [Palestinian] Authority and its leader to act responsibly and accede to the proposal of . . . Israel and enter into direct negotiations with Israel without preconditions,” it said, adding that Mr Abbas “does not intend to reach a peace agreement”.

Mr Obama, whose relations with Mr Netanyahu have been strained, addressed the assembly on Monday but did not mention Israel or the Palestinians, an unusual omission.

Mr Abbas praised French efforts to revive stalled peace negotiations and called for a national unity government that would unite the fractious Palestinian political scene.

"We are determined to preserve the unity of our land and our people," Mr Abbas said. "We seek to form a national unity government that functions according to the program of the Palestine Liberation Organization, and we seek to hold presidential and legislative elections."

Mr Abbas's Fatah controls the West Bank while Hamas, branded a terrorist organisation by Israel and the United States, controls the Gaza Strip.

Israeli-Palestinian strife has risen sharply in recent weeks as Arab states and Palestinians have accused Israeli forces of violations at Al-Aqsa mosque, one of Islam’s holiest places.

Mr Abbas said Israel's use of "brutal force" at the mosque could "convert the conflict from a political to religious one, creating an explosive in Jerusalem and in the rest of the Occupied Palestinian Territory. "

Even though Palestine is not a member of the United Nations, the General Assembly adopted a Palestinian-drafted resolution that permits non-member observer states to fly their flags alongside those of full member states. Palestine and the Vatican are the only non-member observer states.

In 2012, the General Assembly approved the de facto recognition of the sovereign state of Palestine. That followed a failed bid by the Palestinians to secure full UN membership. – (Reuters)