Showing posts with label The Times of Israel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Times of Israel. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Netanyahu: ‘Very important’ to thwart another UN resolution - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a conference of Israeli ambassadors to Europe at the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, January 3, 2017. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a conference of Israeli ambassadors to Europe at the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, January 3, 2017. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90


Netanyahu: ‘Very important’ to thwart another UN resolution

PM warns of ‘more than a few’ indications that conclusions reached at upcoming Paris confab could be ratified at Turtle Bay


 January 3, 2017 THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Israel’s key diplomatic task in the coming two weeks is to prevent an additional Palestine-related resolution at the United Nations Security Council, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday.
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Addressing a conference of Israeli ambassadors and chiefs of mission in Europe at the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, Netanyahu said that it was likely that any conclusions reached at an international peace conference set for January 15, and sponsored by France, could be turned into another resolution.
“The Paris Conference is irrelevant,” he said. “But there are signs that they are trying to turn decisions made there into another Security Council resolution, and that is no longer irrelevant.”
There are more than a few indications for that, Netanyahu added, without elaborating.
“Therefore, our primary effort that we are currently dealing with is the prevention of an additional UN Security Council resolution,” he said.
Netanyahu, who is also foreign minister, went on to say that Jerusalem must also work to prevent another decision or resolution by the Middle East Quartet, which comprises the UN, the United States, the European Union and Russia.
In July 2016, the Quartet published a report that criticized Israeli settlement expansion and Palestinian incitement to violence. Representatives of the group have not announced plans to issue any additional documents.
Israel is making a “great diplomatic effort” to prevent further Security Council or Quartet resolutions, Netanyahu said, instructing the Israeli ambassadors to make that the main focus of their work in the days ahead.
“It won’t take much time, but it will occupy us in the next two weeks, and it needs to succeed,” he said. “This is of utmost importance, immediately.”
After concluding his short public remarks, he continued to brief the Israeli diplomats behind closed doors.
On December 23, the Security Council passed resolution 2334, which declared Israeli settlement outside the pre-1967 lines as having “no legal validity” and constituting “a flagrant violation under international law. Fourteen of 15 member states voted in favor of the text. The US abstained, allowing the resolution to pass.
US Secretary of State John Kerry has since delivered a lengthy speech in which he, again, criticized the settlements and laid out his vision of what a future Israeli-Palestinian peace deal could look like. However, he said that a final status agreement “can only be achieved through direct negotiations between the parties” and that the outgoing administration has no intention of imposing a solution on the sides.
“There are other countries in the UN who believe it is our job to dictate the terms of a solution in the Security Council. Others want us to simply recognize a Palestinian state, absent an agreement,” he said. “But I want to make clear today: These are not the choices that we will make.”
Netanyahu, in his angry response to Kerry’s December 28 speech, said he took no comfort in the pledge not to seek further UN action against Israel. The six “principles” the secretary laid out — including negotiations on the 1967-lines and a Jerusalem as the capital of two states — could be adopted by the upcoming international peace conference in Paris, and then France or Sweden might propose a resolution based on it at the Security Council, he said.
As last week’s abstention on Resolution 2334 showed, the current administration cannot be trusted to protect Israel at the UN, Netanyahu added. “And the United States could say, well, we can’t vote against our own policy, we’ve just enunciated it.”
Other US officials, including senior members of the White House’s national security team, have since vowed to veto any additional Security Council resolution on Israel, including one based on Kerry’s recommendations.

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Israeli PM: Fires worse than 2010 Carmel blaze, other forms of terror - TAMAR PILEGGI AND RAOUL WOOTLIFF - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second right, leads the weekly cabinet meeting at the Haifa municipality, on November 27, 2016. (Kobi Gideon / GPO)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second right, leads the weekly cabinet meeting at the Haifa municipality, on November 27, 2016. (Kobi Gideon / GPO)

Israeli PM: Fires worse than 2010 Carmel blaze, other forms of terror

While lamenting loss of property, Netanyahu says proper preparation, international cooperation saved lives; proposes multinational firefighting force

 November 27, 2016
The dozens of wildfires that destroyed hundreds of homes and forced tens of thousands to flee was in many ways worse than the deadliest fire in Israel’s history and worse than terror attacks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday.
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“In many respects, these fires were more severe than the Carmel tragedy,” he told ministers attending the weekly meeting that convened in Haifa in a show of support for the northern city that bore the brunt of the damage from the blazes.
The 2010 Carmel forest blaze destroyed large swaths of the forested ridge and led to 44 deaths, though it didn’t threaten any large urban areas.
In contrast, the rash of fires that struck Israel over the last several days did not lead to any serious injuries, but wrought widespread havoc, with hundreds of homes destroyed in Haifa and elsewhere around the country.
Authorities estimate that since Tuesday, some 130,000 dunams (32,124 acres) have been destroyed, approximately 30 percent more than the blaze in the forests around Haifa six years ago.
Haifa city officials said Saturday that this week’s fires ravaged some 28,000 dunams (6,900 acres) of land in the city since Thursday.
At least 60,000 of the city’s residents were evacuated Thursday while firefighters battled to contain a blaze that had entered a dozen of the city’s neighborhoods from the nearby Carmel Forest.
The Mediterranean sea and parts of the city can bee sen through a burned house following wildfires in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Nov. 25, 2016. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
The Mediterranean sea and parts of the city can bee sen through a burned house following wildfires in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Nov. 25, 2016. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
Most had returned home by Sunday morning, but an estimated 1,600 residents remained without homes. Between 400 and 530 apartments are said to be completely destroyed by the flames. Dozens of homes in other locales have also been damaged by separate wildfires during the wave.
Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon approved on Saturday evening a stipend of NIS 2,500 ($650) per person for those who fled the raging fires nationwide over the past five days and could not return to their homes because they were destroyed or are currently uninhabitable.
While lamenting the destruction of property, Netanyahu said that proper preparation had prevented a loss of life. “We saved lives,” he said.
Netanyahu added that the fires, many of which officials blame on Arab arsonists, are worse than “other terror attacks.”
“The severity of these cases isn’t equal in severity to other terror attacks, because it is so powerful and it draws on the forces of nature to sow death and destruction,” he said.
A photograph of a camera showing what appears to be a Palestinian man starting a fire in a field near Battir, outside of Bethlehem on November 26, 2016. (Parks Authority)
A photograph of a camera showing what appears to be a Palestinian man starting a fire in a field near Battir, outside of Bethlehem on November 26, 2016. (Parks Authority)
In all, at least 35 people have been arrested since Thursday in connection with the fires but police have not indicated how many were suspected of setting fires and how many of inciting others to do so.
Earlier Sunday morning, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman said there was “proof” that 17 of 110 recorded outbreaks were caused by arsonists, and authorities “were still investigating the other incidents.”
Throughout the week, firefighting equipment from the US, Russia, Turkey, Greece, France, Spain, Canada and the Palestinian Authority joined Israeli crews in dumping tons of water and retardants on the fires around Israel and the West Bank.
In the wake of the wildfires, Netanyahu said ordered ministers to cut through red tape for victims recovering from the fires, and said he intended to ramp up international cooperation in order to tackle wildfires.
“I have initiated the establishment of a multinational force that will not only coordinate operationally, but in the purchase of aircraft, which achieve efficiency on a global scale,” he said.
Netanyahu said regional leaders have “expressed interest” in his plan.
He also responded to a cross-border exchange earlier in the day which saw Israeli forces engage with IS-affiliated fighters on the Syrian frontier.
“We won’t allow Islamic State members or those from other groups to use the Syrian civil war to set up a base on our border,” he said.
Four members of the Khalid ibn al-Walid Army were killed in an Israeli airstrike Sunday morning after shooting at troops who had crossed the border fence, in the first major exchange between Israel and the Islamic State-affiliated group.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Thousands march in Jerusalem in support of Israel - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Thousands march in Jerusalem in support of Israel

Groups from all over the world take part in annual Sukkot parade through the streets of the capital

 October 20, 2016  THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
Christian pilgrims from France march during the annual Jerusalem Parade on October 20, 2016 in the streets of Jerusalem, to mark the Jewish holiday of Sukkot  and to express solidarity with Israel.( AFP PHOTO / AHMAD GHARABLI)
Christian pilgrims from France march during the annual Jerusalem Parade on October 20, 2016 in the streets of Jerusalem, to mark the Jewish holiday of Sukkot and to express solidarity with Israel.( AFP PHOTO / AHMAD GHARABLI)
Supporters of Israel from across the globe marched in Jerusalem on Thursday, two days after UNESCO backed a resolution which effectively denied Jewish and Christian historical ties to the city’s holy sites.
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Thousands marched through the largely closed center of Jerusalem as part of the annual Jerusalem March, traditionally held during the Jewish holiday of Sukkot.
Groups carried flags from dozens of countries, including the United States, Brazil and Thailand, with many visiting as part of Christian delegations.
A large group of Chinese marchers waved their flag alongside signs saying “We stand with Israel” while a British group sang “We love you Israel, we do.”
Israelis from across the country also took part.
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said thousands of people attended, without giving a specific number, while 3,500 police officers were deployed across Jerusalem to protect the march and other key sites during the week-long Sukkot festival.
Shlomo Milevsky, an Orthodox Jew watching the march, said it was good to see support for Israel.
“This is great but it is only for an hour,” he said. “We have to face problems all year.”
Maurie, an American Jew who did not want to give his last name, said the march was a “celebration to show solidarity with Israel.”
He said the march had taken on particular resonance in the wake of the UNESCO vote on the resolution. The motion refers to the Temple Mount and Western Wall only by their Muslim names and condemns Israel as “the occupying power” for various actions taken in both sites.
The resolution was confirmed by UNESCO’s executive board on Tuesday.
Evangelical Christians from Asia carry a replica of the Ark of the Covennant during the annual Jerusalem Parade on October 20, 2016 in the streets of Jerusalem, to mark the Jewish holiday of Sukkot and to express solidarity with Israel. (AFP PHOTO / AHMAD GHARABLI)
Evangelical Christians from Asia carry a replica of the Ark of the Covenant during the annual Jerusalem Parade on October 20, 2016 in the streets of Jerusalem, to mark the Jewish holiday of Sukkot and to express solidarity with Israel. (AFP PHOTO / AHMAD GHARABLI)