OIC RECOGNISES PALESTINE AS A STATE WITH EAST JERUSALEM AS ITS CAPITAL
The
final declaration from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation summit in
Istanbul also condemned the US recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
Pushing
back against last week’s US declaration by President Donald Trump, the final
communique of the Organisation of the Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Istanbul summit
on Wednesday recognised East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine and called
on the international community to do the same.
The
communique came after Muslims leaders, including Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas, gathered at an extraordinary summit of the OIC in Turkey’s commercial
capital, Istanbul. Palestine has been an OIC member state for nearly 30 years.
Speaking
at the summit, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the United States
can no longer be the mediator between Israel and Palestine.
The
communique said the OIC "rejects and condemns in the strongest terms the
unilateral decision by the president of the United States of America
recognising Jerusalem as the so-called capital of Israel, the occupying
power."
The
OIC urged the world to recognise East Jerusalem as the occupied capital of
Palestine and invited “all countries to recognise the state of Palestine and
East Jerusalem as its occupied capital.”
The
57-member bloc also affirmed “its readiness to take the Jerusalem issue to the
UN General Assembly if the UN Security Council fails to take action” against
the “grave violation” represented by the US decision.
"Not
impressed"
In
response, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was 'not impressed'
by the Muslim leaders' statements on Jerusalem.
"We
are not impressed by all these statements," Netanyahu said in a speech,
saying he believed many countries would follow US President Donald Trump's lead
and recognise Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
Turkey's
Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the meeting rejected and condemned the
US move "in the strongest terms."
Trump
announced his decision last week – despite widespread opposition across the
Middle East, from Muslim and Muslim-majority countries, and from many
traditional US allies – to formally recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
The
announcement sparked strong condemnation from around the world, including from
the Arab League, the OIC, the EU and the UN.
Jerusalem
remains at the core of the Israel-Palestine conflict, with Palestinians hoping
that East Jerusalem – now occupied by Israel – will eventually become the
capital of a Palestinian state.
During
his election campaign last year, Trump repeatedly promised to relocate the US
Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
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