Kuwait Times

Trump set for first meeting with Palestinia­n president

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US President Donald Trump meets Mahmud Abbas tomorrow for their first face-to-face talks, with the Palestinia­n leader hoping the billionair­e businessma­n’s unpredicta­ble approach can inject life into long-stalled peace efforts.

Abbas makes the trip to Washington while politicall­y unpopular back home, but hoping Trump can pressure Israel into concession­s he believes are necessary to salvage a two-state solution to one of the world’s oldest conflicts. Palestinia­n officials have seen their cause overshadow­ed by global concerns such as the Syrian war and Islamic State group jihadists, and want Trump’s White House to bring it back to the forefront. “Palestinia­ns are hoping that Trump’s unpredicta­bility might play in their favour,” one Jerusalem-based European official told AFP on condition of anonymity. “They are going to be very disappoint­ed. They can’t be sure of anything.” Examples were seen early on, with Trump backing away from the US commitment to the twostate solution when he met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in February.

He said he would support a single state if it led to peace, delighting Israeli rightwinge­rs who want to see their country annex most of the occupied West Bank. Trump also vowed to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to the disputed city of Jerusalem, a prospect that alarmed Palestinia­ns but which has been put on the back burner for now. At the same time, he urged Israel to hold back on settlement building in the West Bank, a longstandi­ng concern of Palestinia­ns and much of the world. One of Trump’s top advisers, Jason Greenblatt, held wide-ranging talks with both Israelis and Palestinia­ns during a visit in March. Abbas and Trump spoke by phone on March 11.

Pressuring Hamas?

Trump’s unpredicta­bility is far from Abbas’s only concern, with polls suggesting most Palestinia­ns want the 82-year-old to resign. Abbas’s term was meant to expire in 2009, but he has remained in office with no elections held. The bitter split between Abbas’s Fatah party, based in the West Bank, and Hamas, the Islamist movement that runs the Gaza Strip, has also taken a new turn in recent days.

Some analysts say it seems Abbas is seeking to increase pressure on Hamas in the impoverish­ed strip, but he risks being blamed for worsening conditions in the enclave of two million people. Israeli officials say the Palestinia­n Authority dominated by Abbas’s Fatah has begun refusing to pay Israel for electricit­y it supplies to Gaza. Rights activists say exacerbati­ng an already severe power shortage in the strip under an Israeli blockade for 10 years could be catastroph­ic. The reported move comes after the PA announced earlier in April it would temporaril­y cut stipends to its Gaza civil servants. The PA said it was forced into cutbacks by falling foreign aid, but others alleged it could be aimed at stirring discontent in Gaza and destabiliz­ing the Hamas administra­tion there.

Regional support

With those difficulti­es in mind, Abbas may face demands from Trump that could be “political suicide” for him to implement, the European official said. Such demands may include stopping payments to families of Palestinia­ns imprisoned by Israel, a policy heavily criticized by Netanyahu as encouragin­g further violence.

Doing so could further open Abbas to accusation­s of bending to Israel’s will, particular­ly with one of his rivals in Fatah, Marwan Barghouti, leading a hunger strike involving hundreds of Palestinia­n prisoners in Israeli jails since April 17. Barghouti is serving five life sentences over his role in the second Palestinia­n intifada, but he is popular and polls suggest he could win the Palestinia­n presidency.

 ?? —AP ?? RAMALLAH: A banner with a picture of a Palestinia­n prisoner in an Israeli jail reads in Arabic “Karim Younis, the icon of patience and will, 35 years in captivity, for how long,” in the West Bank city of Ramallah yesterday.
—AP RAMALLAH: A banner with a picture of a Palestinia­n prisoner in an Israeli jail reads in Arabic “Karim Younis, the icon of patience and will, 35 years in captivity, for how long,” in the West Bank city of Ramallah yesterday.

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