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Nasrallah Warns U.S. Plan Could Naturalize Palestinian Refugees

Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has warned that a long-delayed U.S peace plan could see Palestinian refugees permanently settled in host countries across the region.

Speaking days after the U.S. announced a May conference in Bahrain to lay out economic aspects of its long-awaited Israeli-Palestinian peace plan, Nasrallah warned of an "ominous deal aimed at eliminating the Palestinian cause."

He said the conference's focus on economic issues "may open the door wide open to the question of naturalizing the Palestinian brothers in Lebanon and the countries where they are located."

The right of return for more than 700,000 refugees who were expelled or fled during the creation of the State of Israel in the late 1940s -- and their millions of descendants -- is a key pillar of the Palestinian cause.

The vast majority cling tightly to hopes, enshrined in a key U.N. Security Council resolution, of returning to lands their families once owned but which are now inside Israel.

An estimated 174,000 Palestinian refugees live in Lebanon, according to a census by national authorities in 2017. 

The U.N. estimates there are tens of thousands more.

Hizbullah has long championed the Palestinian cause, but the Palestinian presence is controversial in Lebanon, where many blame them for causing the bitter civil war that ravaged the country between 1975 and 1990.

Lebanon's Palestinian camps suffer poverty, overcrowding, unemployment, poor and dangerous housing conditions and a lack of infrastructure.

Today, "it's not enough to say we're all against naturalization -- the danger of naturalization is approaching," Nasrallah said during a televised address marking the 19th anniversary of Israel's withdrawal from southern Lebanon.

He called for an urgent meeting between government and Palestinian officials in Lebanon to "develop a plan to confront the danger."

The Palestinians have boycotted the U.S. administration since December 2017, when Trump broke with decades of international consensus and recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

Palestinians consider the eastern part of the city the capital of their future state, fear the U.S. plan will be heavily biased in favour of Israel.

The Palestinian leadership has said it will boycott the June 25-26 meeting in Manama, where the declared aim is to promote Palestinian prosperity as part of Trump's "deal of the century".

The Trump administration is expected to unveil its long-awaited plan possibly as early as next month.

The Bahrain conference could see large-scale investment pledges for the Palestinian territories but is unlikely to focus heavily on the political issues at the core of the conflict, such as the question of Palestinian refugees.

Source: Agence France Presse


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