White House hosts meeting on Gaza crisis… without Palestinians

By
Reuters
|
Jared Kushner, the senior adviser to US President Donald Trump, speaks outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington, US, July 24, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/Files
 

WASHINGTON: The White House on Tuesday hosted 19 nations, including Israel, and Arab Gulf states, to address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, but the Palestinian Authority boycotted the meeting, angered by the Trump administration’s policies on Jerusalem.

US President Donald Trump reversed decades of US policy in December when he decided to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the US embassy there from Tel Aviv.

This incensed Palestinians and other US allies.

The administration is also putting the final touches on a Middle East peace plan, and US officials said the conference was integral to future negotiations.

“Fixing Gaza is necessary to achieve a peace agreement,” one of the senior administration officials said. The officials stressed that the multi-nation humanitarian and reconstruction effort remains in beginning stages.

Jared Kushner, the senior adviser to Trump who is overseeing the Israeli-Palestinian peace-process for the White House, gave a two-hour presentation to the attending countries, officials said, but the potential US peace plan was not addressed.

Attendees included representatives from Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), as well as several European nations.

The format did not allow for direct discussions between Israel and the Arab states, officials said.

Potential electricity, water, sewage, and health projects were discussed, but officials declined to outline specific proposals.

A senior administration insisted that many projects could be implemented without the assistance of the Palestinian Authority but the goal was to have it ultimately engage in the multilateral process.

Gaza faces a 43.6 unemployment rate, and many in Gaza blame Israel for the hardships, accusing it of placing an economic blockade on the enclave that has drastically reduced movement of people and goods.

But Gazans also fault their own leaders, complaining of a power struggle between Hamas, the armed group that seized military power in Gaza in 2007, and Fatah, the party of Western-backed Palestinian President Abbas.

Israel, which pulled its settlers and soldiers out of Gaza in 2005, says it has been forced to control access to and from the territory to prevent Hamas from sending out gunmen and bombers, and from smuggling in weapons or material to make them.

The Palestinian Authority’s prime minister, Rami Hamdallah, escaped an apparent assassination attempt in Gaza on Tuesday when a bomb struck his convoy.

Hamas and the Palestinian Authority signed an agreement in October that called for the extremist group to hand administrative control of Gaza to the Authority, but it remains to be fully implemented.