Palestinians accept first Saudi ambassador

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Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas attending the Arab League Summit in Jeddah in May 2023.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas attending the Arab League Summit in Saudi Arabia, in May 2023.

PHOTO: AFP

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Palestinian officials welcomed a first Saudi Arabian ambassador on Saturday, they said, in a show of support even as the Gulf kingdom is considering the prospect of establishing formal diplomatic relations with Israel.

Saudi Arabia, Islam’s birthplace, has championed the Palestinian cause and shunned official ties with Israel, but the United States is seeking to promote what could be a historic Middle East deal that would include

normalising Israeli-Saudi relations.

At a ceremony in Jordan, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ diplomatic adviser, Mr Majdi al-Khalidi, received a copy of the credentials of Ambassador Nayef al-Sudairi as a non-resident envoy, said official Palestinian news agency Wafa.

The move was “an important step that will contribute to further strengthening the strong brotherly relations that bind the two countries and the two brotherly peoples”, Mr al-Khalidi said, according to Wafa.

Palestinian analyst Talal Okal said the diplomatic appointment was a half-step towards an official Saudi representation office in the occupied West Bank.

“It is also a message (that) Saudi Arabia was committed to the rights of the Palestinians in a fully sovereign state,” he added.

Palestinian concern

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki said last week that Mr Abbas’ Western-backed Palestinian Authority is hoping to engage with Saudi Arabia over its concerns about the potential normalisation of ties with Israel.

US, Israeli and Saudi officials have said that any such agreement would be some way off, with complex issues to be resolved, including an escalation in violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and

the possibility of the development of civilian nuclear power by Saudi Arabia.

Palestinians are concerned that any agreement may weaken support for their cause in the wider Arab world and undermine their hopes of an independent Palestinian state.

Saudi Arabia has quietly accepted

the so-called Abraham Accords

that normalised ties between Israel and Gulf states United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

When asked if he would consider concessions to the Palestinians as part of a Saudi deal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in an NBC interview earlier in August: “The Palestinians should have all the power to govern themselves and none of the powers to threaten us.”

Members of his hard-right coalition, however, have ruled out any concessions. REUTERS

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