Russia, Egypt Say Israeli Annexation of West Bank Will Spark Regional Violence
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                  Russia, Egypt Say Israeli Annexation of West Bank Will Spark Regional Violence

                  Russia, Egypt Say Israeli Annexation of West Bank Will Spark Regional Violence

                  04.06.2020, Israel and the World

                  Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said on Thursday that Israeli annexation of parts of the West Bank will threaten the prospects for a two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict problem and could provoke a new and dangerous round of violence in the region, according to the Russian Foreign Minister's office.

                  "Discussing settlement issues in the Middle East, the ministers supported the invigoration of the concerted efforts of the international community, including the participants of the Quartet of international mediators and Arab League members, with a view to resuming direct Palestinian-Israeli talks under the UN aegis as soon as possible," the statement said.

                  The comments come amid vast criticism of Israeli's plan to annex parts of the West Bank. This week alone, officials in Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have spoken publicly against the move.

                  Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said on Tuesday that the international community must block any Israeli moves toward West Bank annexation, calling it an "unprecedented threat to peace."

                  "The message should be clear: Annexation will not go unanswered. For if it does, there will only be fiercer conflict. Annexation will make the two-state solution an impossibility, it will make institutionalized apartheid an inevitability; it will diminish all chances for a lasting and comprehensive regional peace," Safadi said.

                  Meanwhile, a senior UAE official said on Monday that any unilateral move by Israel to annex parts of the occupied West Bank would be a serious setback for the Middle East peace process.

                  "Continued Israeli talk of annexing Palestinian lands must stop," Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said in a Twitter post.

                  The EU joined calls against Israel's annexation plan in May. At a session on the Middle East, EU representatives expressed their concern over Israel's intentions regarding annexation, saying it would be a violation of international law.

                  The United Nations has also condemned the plan. UN Special Coordinator to the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov commented on Israel's plans for West Bank land annexation earlier in May, saying it will have difficult "legal, political and security implications" and will "diminish prospects for normalization of ties between Israel and Arab states."

                  "Annexation is a big threat. It is prohibited under international law, and will undermine the rules-based international order," said Mladenov in a conference organized by the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations and Mitvim - The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies.

                  Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said cabinet discussions would begin on July 1 on his plan to extend Israeli sovereignty to territory Palestinians want for their own state.

                  By Noa Landau

                  Haaretz