Palestinian Bid to Open Eco Accord 'Not Serious'

W460

A Palestinian request for talks on amending the Paris Protocol governing economic ties with Israel in a bid to address social unrest in the West Bank is "not serious," an Israeli official said on Monday.

Palestinian civil affairs minister Hussein al-Sheikh told Agence France Presse on Sunday he had made a formal request to the Israeli government through the defence ministry for talks on changing the 1994 agreement.

But the official dismissed the move, saying the fact that the request, which he described as very general in nature, was submitted through the defence ministry, was "proof" it was "not serious" and only an attempt to deflect public anger over the spiralling cost of living.

"If they want to open the Paris Protocols, an international agreement, they should have submitted the request to the foreign ministry, or the finance ministry, or simply to the prime minister's office," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Instead, they sent the request to the defence ministry which is not authorised to discuss the issue. "It certainly has no authority to negotiate on the issue," he charged.

He also dismissed the request for talks about the agreement as overly general and not specific."

"It's not serious," he said, indicating that such an issue which should be discussed between heads of government.

The Palestinians were not really interested in reopening the accord and were only looking to shift the blame for their economic problems onto Israel, he said.

"They submitted the request only to be able to tell their public that they submitted the request: Look, we did something and now the Israelis are preventing it. If the cost living rises, it's the Israelis' fault," he said.

He said the Palestinians were not interested in reopening the Paris Protocols because that would require negotiations, "and at this stage they are totally unwilling to show they are negotiating with Israel."

For the Palestinians, "negotiations are normalisation, a prize for Israel, which hasn't frozen settlement activities and released all the prisoners," he said, referring to Palestinian conditions for resuming peace talks.

Comments 1
Missing phillipo 11 September 2012, 19:33

When the Palestinians are willing to sit down with Israel and finally sort out a final and long-lasting peace agreement, then they will have the right to ask Israel to alter the economic agreement. Until then, Israel is right in refusing to discuss the matter.
Why is it that they are willing to sit down and talk about economic affairs, but put up strange barriers to sit down and talk about peace?