The peace process has not faced such ignorance and neglect since Oslo: Shoukry

Ahmed Abbas
3 Min Read
Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry adresses the UN Security Council on regional terrorism threats UN official website

The peace process has not faced such ignorance and neglect since the Oslo agreement in 1993, said the Egyptian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sameh Shoukry.

At a ministerial meeting in Paris about the peace process between the Palestinians and Israelis, Shoukry put an emphasis on the necessity of cooperation between Moscow, Washington, and the EU in order to move the peace process forward to a solution.

Egypt is ready to revive the Arab peace initiative to establish a Palestinian state, he added.

Last week, Netanyahu pointed at the possibility of discussing the Arab initiative for peace which was introduced in 2002 and includes diplomatic recognition of Israel by Arab countries in return for establishing a Palestinian state.

“The Arab peace initiative includes positive elements that can help revive constructive negotiations with the Palestinians,” Netanyahu said.

“We are willing to negotiate with Arab states’ revisions to that initiative so it reflects the dramatic changes in the region since 2002 but maintains the agreed goal of two states for two peoples,” he added.

In Paris, Shoukry said the international community should commit to his own promises regarding solving the Palestinian issue, pointing to the declarations of the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi about the peace process.

Al-Sisi said earlier that a peace agreement between Palestine and Israel will be the basis on which peace and stability is achieved across the entire region.

While the US is currently distracted by its own internal politics, France stepped in and organised an international conference in an attempt to reach a solution on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

While the Palestinians welcomed the French move, the Israelis said that direct negotiations are the best solution to achieving peace with Palestinians. Neither side has yet been invited to the conference.

The US secretary of state John Kerry said that the parties participating in the conference discussed the possibility of organising an international conference by the end of this year, but he asserted the importance of direct negotiations.

“What today emphasised is we need to find some kind of immediate steps on the ground that will make a difference,” Kerry told journalists. “We need to work with the parties. Everybody agreed today that you can’t impose a solution from the outside.”

The final statement of the conference warned of the current deadlock of the peace process that prevents the establishment of a Palestinian state and added that the direct negotiations between the two sides should be based on international resolutions.

The Saudi minister of foreign affairs Adel Al-Jubair said the Arab initiative that was presented in 2002 still has all the elements for a comprehensive settlement.

Peace talks stalled following the collapse of a US-led initiative two years ago.

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Ahmed Abbas is a journalist at DNE’s politics section. He previously worked as Egypt based reporter for Correspondents.org, and interned as a broadcast journalist at Deutsche Welle TV in Berlin. Abbas is a fellow of Salzburg Academy of Media and Global Change. He holds a Master’s Degree of Journalism and New Media from Jordan Media Institute. He was awarded by the ICFJ for best public service reporting in 2013, and by the German foreign office for best feature in 2014.