Palestinians still committed to making just peace with Israel: Abbas
Published : 13 Sep 2018, 20:38
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Thursday that the Palestinian people are still committed to making just peace with Israel.
Abbas made the remarks during a meeting at his headquarters in Ramallah with the leaders of three main religions, Islam, Christianity and Judaism, in the Palestinian territories.
He stressed on the necessity of making peace with Israel based on international resolutions related to the establishment of a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital.
Abbas was quoted by the official Palestinian news agency WAFA as saying that the Palestinian people deserve an independent state with East Jerusalem as its capital, "which will be open for the three main religions."
"Palestine is a model to be followed and a good example in coexistence and social peace," the Palestinian leader said.
The religious leaders affirmed to Abbas their support to his policies that aim at achieving the hope and aspiration of the Palestinian people, namely freedom and independence.
Abbas is scheduled to address the General Assembly of the United Nations on Sept. 27.
Ahmad Majdalani, a senior official in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), said that Abbas' speech "will be like the worksheet for the coming stage."
He told the official Voice of Palestine Radio that the Palestinians will carry on with their steps that will be escalated within the coming period, in response to the American and Israeli policies and measures that were taken to terminate the Palestinian cause.
The Palestinian Authority has been boycotting the U.S. administration led by President Donald Trump as a peace broker, after Trump announced last December to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital, and relocated the U.S. ambassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to the disputed holy city in May.
The Israeli-Palestinian peace talks have been stalled since 2014 after nine months of U.S.-sponsored talks failed to make progress to resolve the decades-long conflict.