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Palestinian PM expects no political plan from US Bahrain workshop

"Bahrain was just simply a terrible exercise. I think it's an economic workshop that has been fully and totally divorced from reality. [It was] no more than an intellectual exercise," says Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh.

by  Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Published on  06-27-2019 19:05
Last modified: 06-27-2019 19:06
Palestinian PM expects no political plan from US Bahrain workshopReuters/Raneen Sawafta

PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh in Ramallah, Thursday | Photo: Reuters/Raneen Sawafta

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A day after the Trump administration wrapped up an international conference meant to lay the economic foundations for Israeli-Palestinian peace, Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said Thursday it was "divorced from reality" and unlikely to evolve into a political plan.

Washington billed the two-day workshop in Bahrain as the first stage of its broader blueprint to resolve the Middle East conflict. US Gulf Arab allies said the economic initiative had promise if a political settlement is reached.

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Shtayyeh, however, said he felt the initiative "will not really materialize and it's not going to go anywhere."

"Bahrain was just simply a terrible exercise. I think it's an economic workshop that has been fully and totally divorced from reality," he said in his office in the West Bank city of Ramallah. "[It was] no more than an intellectual exercise."

The Bahrain "Prosperity to Peace" workshop called for a $50 billion investment fund to stimulate the Palestinian and neighboring Arab state economies, more than half to be spent in the Palestinian territories over 10 years.

But Palestinian leaders boycotted the conference and are refusing to engage with the White House – accusing it of pro-Israel bias after US President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital in 2017. The Palestinians demand east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state.

The political details of the long-delayed plan, which is spearheaded by Trump's senior adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, remain a secret known only to a handful of people.

Kushner and Trump's Mideast envoy Jason Greenblatt have said the political elements will be unveiled later, possibly after a second snap Israeli election set for September.

But Palestinians fear the Trump team may abandon the "two-state solution," which envisages the creation of an independent Palestinian state co-existing alongside Israel.

"We haven't seen in the paper any reference to [Israeli] occupation, to settlements, to Palestine, to two states, to 1967 borders, to Jerusalem and so on," Shtayyeh said.

Of the Israelis, he said: "The debate in Israel today, it's very unfortunate that it is not between those who want to end occupation and those who want to maintain occupation. The debate in Israel today is between those who want to maintain the status quo and those who want to annex certain parts of the West Bank."

Shtayyeh, a member of PA President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction, was named in March to replace Rami al-Hamdallah, who had spearheaded reconciliation efforts with Fatah's principal internal rival, the Islamist Hamas organization, which rules Gaza.

Shtayyeh formerly headed PECDAR, the Palestinian Economic Council for Development and Reconstruction.

But he inherited a government squeezed by steep US aid cuts, the crisis exacerbated by a political dispute with Israel over the withholding of some 5% of the approximately $190 million monthly tax revenues that Israel transfers to the Palestinian Authority, over the PA's refusal to stop paying terrorists and their families monthly stipends.

The mounting financial pressures on the PA have sent its debt soaring to $3 billion, and led to a severe contraction in its estimated $13 billion GDP economy, according to the PA's top central banker.

Shtayyeh warned that this situation could soon weaken the PA security forces that work closely with the IDF in the West Bank.

"Can we maintain this situation? I'm not sure about that. If the policeman has no petrol in his car, he will not be able to maintain law and order in the streets. That is where the problem is," he said.

Tags: BahrainIsraelMohammad ShtayyehPalestinians

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