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Le chef de la diplomatie palestinienne exhorte Israël à cesser d'encourager la violence des colons

La ministre palestinienne des Affaires étrangères a déclaré à Euronews qu’Israël, en tant que puissance occupante, devrait protéger les Palestiniens de Cisjordanie mais soutient au contraire la violence des colons, et que la guerre avec l’Iran marginalise davantage leurs aspirations étatiques.

LIRE L’ARTICLE : http://fr.euronews.com/2026/04/13/le-chef-de-la-diplomatie-palestinienne-exhorte-israel-a-cesser-dencourager-la-violence-des

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00:07Hello and welcome to our interview program 12 Minutes With.
00:11Today my guest is the Palestinian Foreign Affairs Minister, Varsin Arabikan Shaheen.
00:17Minister, thanks for being with us.
00:19Thank you for hosting me.
00:21Absolutely.
00:22So the whole world obviously is watching what is unraveling in the Middle East,
00:25namely in Iran and Lebanon with the U.S.-Israeli war in that region.
00:30How is it affecting you?
00:32How is it affecting the Palestinians first politically?
00:35Well, any escalation in the region, any conflict in the region affects the whole region
00:40and especially the Palestinians because the Palestinian issue invariably becomes marginalized.
00:47And we've seen this happening in the last 40 days.
00:50So what we are asking for or looking forward to is de-escalation
00:55and the diplomacy and the dialogue to take place rather than the military operations.
01:03So we hope that both parties can come to terms and a ceasefire becomes sustainable,
01:12albeit what has come out from the last meeting in Pakistan is still problematic.
01:21But we hope that things can be aired out to a better path.
01:25Are there any effects economically for Palestinians that you can mention?
01:29Yes, of course, because this whole war is disastrous on all levels, economically, first and foremost.
01:39And if the neighboring countries are affected economically, it would definitely affect the Palestinians.
01:46The Palestinians today are under a lot of financial strain.
01:51Do you have a plan to help citizens or the finances, the Palestinian authorities are such that you cannot provide
01:58the extra help?
01:59One of our foremost priorities is to help people steadfast.
02:04But that steadfastness needs money.
02:09And that money is not available, especially today when the Palestinian clearance revenue money has been withheld by the Israelis.
02:17And we have billions of shekels sitting in Israeli banks.
02:22Today, the Palestinian authorities are unable to meet the basic needs of its people.
02:28I mean, if we talk about education, health care, water, electricity, we're passing through very, very rough times.
02:34Various UN agencies have noted an uptick in settlers' attacks against Palestinian civilians,
02:42especially since the Hamas terrorist attack in October 2023.
02:47But it's only getting worse and worse.
02:52What have you observed on the ground yourself?
02:55Well, settler attacks are part of a systematic policy on displacing Palestinians,
03:02forcing Palestinians to leave terrorizing Palestinian lives.
03:06It cannot be separated from the overall state policy.
03:10And yes, we see an intensification of settler terror for the last two years.
03:15And more specifically, in the last three months, I just received a report on settler attacks for the month of
03:24March last month.
03:25And there were 3,000 attacks, a bit over 3,000 attacks, which means some, I mean, tens of attacks
03:35every day.
03:36And these attacks come in various forms and shapes.
03:39It's no longer going out and being stopped by a settler.
03:44These settlers are coming to our homes.
03:46They are attacking us in our homes, in our backyards.
03:49They loot homes.
03:51They burn trees.
03:53They burn the yards.
03:54They burn vehicles.
03:56They stone our children.
03:59And they are very much supported by the Israeli occupation forces.
04:04I mean, those occupation forces have an obligation to protect the occupied.
04:11But what we see is they either look and do nothing or they are engaged in the actual terror attacks.
04:20And this needs to be stopped.
04:22It's very serious.
04:23A few days ago, the army chief in Israel, Eyal Zamir, denounced the attacks and said they had to bring
04:33more troops to the West Bank.
04:35So they are short of troops, obviously, with all this war is going on at the same time.
04:39And a battalion was actually removed from Lebanon to be sent to the West Bank.
04:44Do you see any improvements in more troops trying to contain the violence or not?
04:50I think this is necessary, but not enough at all.
04:56Because we need to change the policy.
05:00The policy uses the settlers to terrorize the Palestinians.
05:05That needs to change.
05:07It's not enough to talk about it.
05:09It's not enough to call them terrorists.
05:11What we need to see is action on the ground to halt whatever these terrorist settlers are doing.
05:20Okay.
05:20Now, last month, late last month, as you know, Israel voted to restore the death penalty.
05:28And the text is phrased in such a way that it clearly only addresses the Palestinians
05:33that would have committed fatal terrorist attacks against Israeli Jews.
05:39How did you receive that new law?
05:42Well, again, it's part of a systematic policy of erasing the other.
05:47And this law has no legal base whatsoever.
05:50It's highly discriminatory because it relates to the Palestinians and only the Palestinians.
05:56And the world needs to wonder, I mean, when you see a state that calls itself civilized instituting
06:04a death penalty law on prisoners of conscience and celebrating the institution of this law.
06:13So this needs to be looked upon with a lot of concern by the whole world.
06:18But if I may, the law stipulates that it is for people, it doesn't say Palestinians,
06:26but it's phrased in a way that it is targeting Palestinians that are guilty and charged of having committed
06:33a fatal terrorist attack, of having killed a Jewish citizen.
06:37So these are particular prisoners.
06:39Yes, but our people have been killed for decades.
06:42I mean, we have been subjected to death penalty by the Israelis for decades.
06:49The extrajudicial killing on our streets continue.
06:53What needs to happen is to look at the occupation and the root causes of this occupation
06:58and see what entitlements people have under occupation, what struggle, how they can struggle
07:07against that occupation and deal with it accordingly.
07:10That penalty is something that is abolished all over the world.
07:14Okay.
07:15Now, moving to the future of Palestinian statehood, are you watching the Israeli election that will
07:22take place in October 2026?
07:24In other words, are you hoping there will be a new Israeli administration that you can talk to
07:29to resume some kind of dialogue?
07:32Of course, we always hope for new faces and new policies so that we can come to terms with
07:38the fact that we need to go to the root cause and start genuinely talking about it.
07:43We haven't seen this in the past Israeli governments because the policy has been the same.
07:49The policy has not changed.
07:51Israeli policy is expansionist, it's colonialist, it's annexationist, and they say it very clearly
07:57until they come to terms with the fact that for them to be in the area and for us to
08:02live in peace and security
08:04as neighbors, they have to respect the rights of their neighbors, the Palestinians.
08:10And these rights are enshrined in international law.
08:12We're not asking anything above international law.
08:15Last but not least, you know, under the Netanyahu's administration and Trump's administration,
08:22Jerusalem was the next.
08:23So here goes the idea of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
08:30Sedlin activity has gone, you know, has increased a lot under Netanyahu.
08:37How do you see that, you know, for future talks now that, you know, and as we know, the UN
08:43and international
08:44order and law is not exactly the reference anymore.
08:47It's been shunned left, right and center.
08:49So are you ready to water down your expectations?
08:53I mean, how do you see things happening if and when a dialogue resumes?
08:58If and when a dialogue resumes, that dialogue needs to follow the parameters of the two-state solution
09:04and nothing but international law, albeit that international law is under a lot of threat.
09:09I mean, the compass needs to be international law, even if it's under threat.
09:14And we will continue asking to work by the parameters of the Madrid Conference, the New York Declaration,
09:21the rights of the Palestinian people as enshrined in international law.
09:26And then when we come to terms, if a peace agreement is forged, then other areas can be negotiated,
09:32but not before the acknowledgement of Palestinian rights on their state as enshrined by international
09:39law on the 1967 lines.
09:41Can East Jerusalem be negotiated?
09:44East Jerusalem is part and parcel of occupied territory as per international law.
09:48And as such, we need to deal with it as occupied territory.
09:52Okay.
09:52But you understand that in Gaza, when the settlements were removed under Sharon, there were 8,000 settlers at the
10:01time.
10:02In the West Bank, there are 500,000.
10:05And if you include East Jerusalem, 700,000.
10:08Are you seriously, and I'm sorry, hoping that, you know, this settlement will be dismantled to make way for a
10:16Palestinian state?
10:16Is it realistic, in other words?
10:18It has to be realistic.
10:20If it was realistic to displace 750,000 Palestinian refugees in 1948, and this was accepted by the world,
10:29it would be much easier to remove 750,000 illegal settlers living on stolen Palestinian land.
10:38They have Israel.
10:39They can go back to Israel proper if there is genuine intent on peace.
10:44And if there's genuine intent on peace, negotiations can take place afterwards, after the two parties say this is Israel
10:53and this is Palestine.
10:54And some border modifications can be negotiated, but not before the recognition of the rights of the Palestinian people.
11:03Can you give me one concession that the Palestinians would be able to make to the Israeli if and when
11:11negotiations were given?
11:13Can you give me one concession that the Palestinians would be willing to make to the Israelis?
11:16I think the question should be reversed.
11:19The question needs to go to the Israeli side.
11:21The Palestinians have made numerous concessions in the last seven decades, and they have conceded 78% of historic Palestine.
11:29What we're asking for is to recognize our state, materialize the state on the 22%.
11:35It is Israel that needs to come forward.
11:38But as I said, if there is a genuine intent on peace, matters can't be negotiated, but they need to
11:45be negotiated in good faith.
11:47Well, I guess you'll be watching the U.S. elections as well in 2028.
11:52Yes.
11:52That's a game changer.
11:53Thank you, Minister.
11:54Thanks for being with us today.
11:55You're welcome.
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