Palestinian leader says Israel ignored his overture to resume security ties

Palestinian leader says Israel ignored his overture to resume security ties
Palestinian Authority Mahmud Abbas. (AFP file photo)
Updated 20 August 2017
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Palestinian leader says Israel ignored his overture to resume security ties

Palestinian leader says Israel ignored his overture to resume security ties

JERUSALEM: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told Israeli opposition lawmakers on Sunday that he had proposed rolling back his month-old suspension of security coordination with Israel, but that it did not respond to the overture, the delegation said.
Abbas suspended ties on July 21, demanding that Israel remove metal detectors it had installed outside a Jerusalem compound housing the Al-Aqsa mosque in response to the killing of two of its police guards by gunmen who had holed up there.
Amid Palestinian and Jordanian unrest, and US mediation efforts, Israel dismantled the walk-through gates on July 25 and said it would install less obtrusive security measures.
“We recently communicated with them (Israeli security officials) in an attempt to resume some kind of cooperation,” Abbas told a visiting delegation from Israel’s left-wing Meretz party, according to a statement issued by the lawmakers.
“But they have not returned an answer, something that has prevented progress in thawing ties,” he was quoted as saying.
Abbas aides were not immediately available for comment. His administration’s relations with Israel are resented by many Palestinians, such as those from rival Islamist movement Hamas.
An Israeli military spokeswoman, asked about Abbas’ reported remarks, said: “We do not comment on the security coordination.”
Despite the impasse, both sides view security coordination as a means of tamping down violence in the occupied West Bank, where Palestinians have limited self-rule.
Al-Aqsa, Islam’s third-holiest shrine, is among areas Israel captured from Jordan in a 1967 war, and where Palestinians want statehood. Jews revere the site as vestige of their two ancient temples. Israel, the Palestinians and Jordan have tried to stave off religious tensions there with delicate access arrangements.
Palestinians deemed the metal detectors a breach of this decades-old status quo. As violent protests surged, Israeli forces killed four Palestinians. A Palestinian also knifed three Israelis to death in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank.
According to the Meretz statement, Abbas said on Sunday that his administration had doubled monitoring of the area since the killing of the two police guards by three Israeli Arab gunmen.
Palestinian security forces do not have a formal presence in Jerusalem, all of which Israel claims as its capital — a status not recognized internationally.