EAST JERUSALEM AS PALESTINIAN CAPITAL : OIC DECLARES
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has declared
East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, rejected the US stance as
"dangerous" and called on the international community to follow in
its footsteps.
At a summit held in Turkey a week after US President Donald
Trump declared Jerusalem as Israel's capital, the group of Muslim leaders on
Wednesday called on all countries to "recognise the State of Palestine and
East Jerusalem as its occupied capital".
In a statement, the OIC added that the 57-member group
remains committed to a "just and comprehensive peace based on the
two-state solution".
It also called on the UN to "end the Israeli
occupation" of Palestine and declared Trump's administration liable for
"all the consequences of not retracting from this illegal decision".
"[We] consider that this dangerous declaration, which
aims to change the legal status of the [city], is null and void and lacks any
legitimacy," the group said.
Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior political analyst, said
the summit in Istanbul highlighted that Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims
continue to be committed to peace.
"Now, Muslim countries in addition to a whole lot of
others that are allied with the Palestinian cause will recognise Jerusalem as
the capital of Palestine," he said.
"And those Islamic countries are ready to sever
relations to punish any one country that follows in the footsteps of the United
States in recognising Jerusalem as the capital of Israel."
Situation of instability
Speaking earlier on Wednesday, Yousef al-Othaimeen, the OIC's
secretary general, rejected the US decision and urged Muslim leaders to work
together to present a united response to the move.
"The OIC rejects and condemns the American
decision," he said. "This is a violation of international law ... and
this is a provocation of the feelings of Muslims within the world.
"It will create a situation of instability in the region
and in the world."
Speaking before al-Othaimeen, Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas said the US had "disqualified" itself from future
Israel-Palestine peace talks after proving its "bias in favour of
Israel".
Founded in 1969, the OIC bills itself as "the collective
voice of the Muslim world".
Trump announced on December 6 that the US formally recognises
Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and will begin the process of moving its
embassy to the city, breaking with decades of US policy.
The decision violated international law, according to Abbas.
"We shall not accept any role for the United States in
the peace process, they have proven their full bias in favour of Israel,"
he said.
"Jerusalem is and always will be the capital of
Palestine."
Palestinians envisage East Jerusalem as the capital of a
future state. Israel, meanwhile, says Jerusalem, which is under Israeli
occupation, cannot be divided.
The comments by Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority
(PA) were seen as his strongest yet on the issue.
Al Jazeera's Hoda Abdel-Hamid, reporting from Ramallah, said
Palestinians were "very frustrated" after seeing "many
agreements and many condemnations" but "nothing really changing for
them on the ground".
"When you ask them who they hold responsible for that,
they say certainly the PA, their own leadership," she said, citing
Palestinians' disappointment about the disunity among their different political
factions.
Abdel-Hamid also said that "there is a belief among many
Palestinians that Trump's Jerusalem move couldn't have happened without the
green light of Saudi Arabia".
The Istanbul summit was attended by just over 20 heads of
state - Saudi Arabia deployed a lower-level government official, while Egypt
and others sent their foreign ministers.
The extraordinary OIC summit was called for by Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan following Trump's announcement.
Speaking at the meeting, Erdogan accused Israel of being a
"state of terror" and said the US' recognition of Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel had been rebuked by the international community.
"It is null and void … except Israel, no country in the
world has supported [this decision]," he said.
"Anyone who walks a few minutes in the streets of
Jerusalem will recognise this city is under occupation."
Al Jazeera's Mohammed Adow, reporting from Istanbul, said
Erdogan was seeking to "unite the Muslim world" and "come up
with a concerted response" to the US' move.
"He faces a daunting task," our correspondent said.
"In the hall that he was addressing, there were countries who are not
willing to go beyond rhetoric opposition at the expense of sacrificing their
relationship with the United States," he said.
Trump's move has provoked a wave of protests from Asia,
through the Middle East, to North Africa, with tens of thousands of people
taking to the streets in recent days to denounce his decision.
SOURCE: AL
JAZEERA NEWS
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