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Netanyahu says Palestinian UN bid could harm peace

by Reuters
Monday, 13 June 2011 14:13 GMT

ROME, June 13 (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reaffirmed Israel's opposition to any bid to win U.N. recognition of Palestinian statehood on Monday and said only direct negotiations could restart the blocked peace process.

Speaking after a meeting in Rome with Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi, Netanyahu said any "fiat" issued by the United Nations would hinder the peace process.

"First, it would violate the agreements between the Palestinians and Israel but it would also harden the Palestinian position because if the U.N. General Assembly adopts the Palestinian positions in advance of negotiations why should they negotiate?" he said.

"So such a resolution is backed by an overwhelming majority including the leading countries of the world, that could actually push peace back by hardening Palestinian positions, by pushing negotiations further away."

Netanyahu said both sides needed to compromise but he offered no details.

"Peace will only come from negotiations. It will be a negotiated peace. It cannot be imposed from the outside, not by any power and certainly not by one-sided U.N. resolutions," he told a news conference.

The Palestinians currently have the status of U.N. observers without voting rights but are hoping that at September's General Assembly they can persuade other nations to accept them as a sovereign member.

Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas walked out of U.S.-sponsored peace talks with Israel shortly after they began last September, demanding a halt to building in Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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