Far-right lawmaker says proposal aims to cancel 1993 agreement, expand settlements in West Bank
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the opening of a Knesset session, on October 28, 2024. Photo : Reuters
An Israeli ministerial committee is expected to discuss a bill on Sunday that seeks to scrap the Oslo Accords and prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, according to Hebrew media reports Saturday.
Channel 12 said the Ministerial Committee for Legislation will review the proposal, which seeks to revoke the 1993 agreement signed between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organisation.
The bill was submitted by Knesset Deputy Speaker Limor Son Har-Melech, who claimed the Oslo Accords had brought “terror instead of peace” and said it was time for what she described as a “national correction,” according to Israel’s Channel 7.
Read: Gaza flotilla activists to be released from Israel detention and deported
“We promised to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and now it is time to encourage settlement in Areas A and B and cancel the disastrous Oslo Accords,” Har-Melech wrote on X. She described the proposed legislation as “a first and necessary step” toward correcting the overall situation.
Areas A and B in the occupied West Bank fall under varying levels of the Palestinian Authority administration under the Oslo framework.
Officially known as the “Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements,” the Oslo Accords were signed in Washington on September 13, 1993, between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organisation.
The agreement was signed in the presence of late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and under the sponsorship of then-United States President Bill Clinton.