JPost staff and Gil Hoffman
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's office on Monday morning denied the report
in Al-Quds al-Arabi that he and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas had agreed to transfer the Temple Mount's holy sites to Jordanian
custody.
The Prime Minister's Office said that no agreement had been reached on
the holy sites in Jerusalem.
According to the report in the London-based newspaper, Olmert and Abbas
had agreed that the Temple Mount sites would be under Jordanian
jurisdiction in a final peace deal, and Jordanian citizenship would be
granted to 90,000 east Jerusalem residents.
The report also said it was likely that a supreme supervisory
commission would be established, which would include representatives
from the UN, Egypt, Jordan, Israel and the PA.
The report drew strong criticism form the right-wing.
MK Uri Ariel (NU/NRP) said: "If the report is true, the Israeli
government has stripped itself of any linkage to Zionism or its Jewish
roots."
"The Olmert government is trying to destroy the dreams of thousands of
generations who have dreamed and worked to return the Jewish people to
its land, continued Ariel, vowing: "we wont let him succeed."
Ariel's party colleague MK Aryeh Eldad said that if Israel willingly
gives up sovereignty of the Temple Mount to a foreign power "it will
lose its moral, historical, legal and religious justification for
existence."
"This is post Zionist, nonsensical and suicide," he said.
MK Tzi Hendel (NU/NRP) said: "I warned long ago that Olmert would
divide Jerusalem, and now it is clear that even the Temple Mount, which
is the heart and soul of the Jewish people, is going for cheap."
Shas chairman Eli Yishai said that "whoever thinks he has the authority
to give up Jerusalem is wrong. The obligation to keep Jerusalem is
solid, not a political gust of wind."
When Israel and Jordan signed a peace deal in 1994, it was agreed that
Israel would honor the special role of the Hashemite Kingdom over the
Islamic holy sites in Jerusalem and in a final Israeli-Palestinian
peace accord, Israel would give high importance to Jordan's historic
role over the holy sites.
Israel Radio reported that Jordan had recently set up a new fund for
the renovation of Al Aksa Mosque and Dome of the Rock. The head of the
fund even proposed that Jordan give Jordanian passports to some 90,000
east Jerusalem residents.
Meanwhile, Vice Premier Haim Ramon told Israel Radio that the question
of who would have custody of Jerusalem's holy sites must not be
discussed at the moment.
"We must decide that in that area there will be a special body which we
will discuss in the future," he said.
Also Monday, in an interview with Army Radio, Ramon said that Olmert's
coalition would support his plan to give the Palestinians several east
Jerusalem neighborhoods in exchange for territory in the West Bank.
Ramon said that even Israel Beiteinu would back such a concession, as
would the Labor Party.
"There are two central parties that agree to this," Ramon said. "The
most important thing is to preserve the Jewish and democratic state of
Israel."
Ramon told Israel Radio that there was a consensus in the cabinet that
"no Palestinian refugee should return to Israel under the law of return
- legal or moral."
However, he proposed a discussion over refugees who wanted to return
for humanitarian reasons, saying that "the idea that this will cause
Israel's collapse is ridiculous."
On Sunday, Ramon hinted that his Jerusalem plan, announced last month,
would be on the negotiating table at the November Middle East peace
conference in Annapolis.
Ramon's associates said afterwards that he had merely stated his own
positions that he has favored for many years. They said his views had
become mainstream and were even adopted by Israel Beiteinu.
According to the plan, Israel would not transfer control of the Old
City and neighborhoods around it to the Palestinians, Ramon said in the
Monday interview.
Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz said Ramon's plan would damage
Israel both on a national level and a security level.
He told Israel Radio that Ramon's proposal on refugees and the division
of Jerusalem would "never pass in any Israeli government."
Mofaz warned that "in a few months we will be facing a Fatah-Hamas
alliance so we must be reasonable and responsible in our proposals to
the Palestinians."
In Sunday's cabinet meeting, Israel Beiteinu leader Avigdor Lieberman
surprised many by agreeing that Israel should cede control of certain
areas of Jerusalem, while strengthening its control of areas such as
the Old City and Mount Scopus.
At a press conference Monday Lieberman said: "We are ready for
exchanging populations and territory."
"It's wrong to fix the Palestinian problem without addressing the
Israeli Arab problem," Lieberman continued, saying that the Jewish
people didn't pray to return to Anata or Shuafat and not even to Taibe
or Um-El-Fahm.
"We are ready to exchange Anata and Shuafat for Givat Ze'ev and Gush
Etzion. Their only connection to Israel is that they come for NIS 11
billion in national insurance while the taxes collected from them is a
fraction of that," said the Israel Beiteinu chairman.
However, Lieberman went on to say that there was no room for a foreign
presence in the Old City or Mount Scopus. "That's integral," he said.
He also dismissed the right of return for Palestinian refugees - "not
in the humanitarian sense and not in a telepathic sense," adding that
there was no territorial contiguity between Gaza and the West Bank and
no possibility to divide Israeli sovereignty in the Old City.
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Jordan won't control Temple Mt.
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