Palestinians have met Biden’s visit with scepticism and say their concerns of settlement expansion have been ignored
By MEE staff
US President Joe Biden will meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Bethlehem on Friday before flying out to Saudi Arabia to meet Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
On Thursday, Biden reaffirmed Washington’s support for the two-state solution before meeting Abbas.
Biden also welcomed Saudi Arabia’s decision to allow Israeli airlines to fly over Saudi airspace, with Air Force One flying directly to Jeddah from Israel on Friday afternoon.
Palestinians have met Biden’s visit with scepticism and say their concerns for self-determination and settlement building were ignored in favour of Israel’s regional stability with its Arab neighbours.
Ramallah has also criticised Biden for not reopening its consulate for Palestinians in Jerusalem, closed by former US President Donald Trump in 2019.
Biden’s meeting with Abbas will be the most senior-level meeting between the US and Palestinian officials since the murder of Al-Jazeera Arabic journalist Shireen Abu Akleh who was also an American citizen.
Earlier this week, the Israeli human rights group B’tselem put up a series of billboards and digital screens in Bethlehem and Ramallah to welcome Biden with the sign “Mr President, This is Apartheid”.
Last month, the United Nations concluded that Israeli forces had killed Akleh while she was reporting on unrest in the West Bank city of Jenin.
Before Biden’s visit, US investigators said the bullet that killed Akleh had originated from an Israeli soldier but that the killing “was not intentional”.
Multiple eyewitnesses, including Middle East Eye contributor Shatha Hanaysa, said the 51-year-old veteran Al Jazeera journalist was shot dead by Israeli snipers while reporting on a raid in the West Bank city of Jenin.
However, Israel quickly tried to suggest Palestinian gunmen were responsible, with both Israel’s military and its US embassy tweeting a video of Palestinian shooters in Jenin firing down an alley.
Middle East Eye