Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas met an Israeli government delegation in Ramallah on Sunday evening, the second meeting between the two sides in a month, said sources on both sides.
Abbas received Israel’s Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz, Regional Cooperation Minister Issawi Freij and deputy Michal Rozin, all from the left-wing Meretz party, part of the ruling coalition.
“The president underlined the importance of ending the Israeli occupation and achieving a just and global peace conforming to international resolutions,” the territory’s official news agency WAFA reported.
Abbas also stressed the need to put an end to the settlements, and to end the expulsion of Palestinian families from different parts of East Jerusalem, WAFA added.
The Meretz members reiterated their support for a two-state solution to the conflict, for an independent Palestinian state and the need to build trust between the two sides.
“We have a common mission,” Horowitz wrote later on Twitter.
“To maintain the hope of a peace founded on the two-state solution.” The tweet included a photo of him standing with Abbas.
יש לנו משימה משותפת: לשמור על התקווה לשלום, על בסיס פתרון שתי המדינות. כי אין פתרון אחר.
הערב ברמאללה, עם נשיא הרשות הפלסטינית, עשינו עוד צעד להעמיק את שיתוף הפעולה עם השכנים הקרובים והחשובים ביותר שלנו. pic.twitter.com/0lm0kAnlJz— 🇮🇱ניצן הורוביץ Nitzan Horowitz (@NitzanHorowitz) October 3, 2021
Meretz leader Horowitz has been harshly criticized by the right in Israel for his meetings with Abbas.
In late August, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz visited the Palestinian Authority’s headquarters for talks with Abbas, the first such official meeting at this level in several years.
But after those talks, Israel’s Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said that there was no peace process ongoing with the Palestinians, “and there won’t be one.”
Sunday’s meeting happened as leaders of the Hamas movement, which controls the Gaza Strip, held talks in the Egyptian capital Cairo over a possible exchange of prisoners with Israel.
Addressing the UN General Assembly last month, Abbas on September 24 gave Israel one year to withdraw from occupied territory, failing which he would no longer recognize the Jewish state based on pre-1967 borders.
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