26-04-2024 09:02 PM Jerusalem Timing

Zionist Minister: Palestinians to Pay ‘Heavy Price’ for UN Move

Zionist Minister: Palestinians to Pay ‘Heavy Price’ for UN Move

Renewed Palestinian action to join UN agencies and international treaties could push ‘Israel’ to annex territory in the occupied West Bank

Renewed Palestinian action to join UN agencies and international treaties could push ‘Israel’ to annex territory in the occupied West Bank, a hardline Zionist minister warned on Wednesday.
  
"If they are now threatening (to go to UN institutions), they must know something simple: they will pay a heavy price," Tourism Minster Uzi Landau told public radio.
  
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas on Tuesday said he had begun steps to join several UN agencies, abandoning a pledge to freeze such action for the duration of peace talks -- which end in just four weeks.
  
The Palestinians had repeatedly threatened to resume their action through international courts and the UN over Israel's settlement expansion on occupied territory in the West Bank and in east Jerusalem.
  
"One of the possible measures will be Israel applying sovereignty over areas which will clearly be part of the State of Israel in any future solution," said Landau, a member of the hardline Yisrael Beitenu faction.
  
Israel could also hurt the Palestinians economically by acting "to block financial aid to them," the minister added.
  
The standoff came soon after US Secretary of State John Kerry left the Zionist entity on Tuesday after a lightning visit. He had been due to fly back to the region on Wednesday for talks in Ramallah with Abbas but he cancelled his visit following the Palestinian leader's announcement,  while attempting to remain optimistic.
  
"It is completely premature tonight to draw... any final judgement about today's events and where things are," he said in Brussels. The top US diplomat had hoped to convince the Palestinians to extend the faltering talks beyond their April 29 deadline, with the sides discussing a proposal which would have included a limited freeze on settlement construction.