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Bill curbing Jerusalem talks sparks Israel cabinet battle

Published: 22 Oct 2013 - 12:04 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 03:23 pm


Ultra-orthodox Jewish men stand on a street covered with election campaign leaflets in Jerusalem yesterday. Israel’ will hold municipal elections today.

JERUSALEM: Israel’s chief peace negotiator Tzipi Livni yesterday filed an appeal after ministers approved a bill aimed at curbing peace talks on the future of Jerusalem, her spokeswoman said.

The draft law seeks to prevent any negotiations on the future of the Holy City without first obtaining a two-thirds majority of 80 of the 120 members of the Israeli parliament.

It was approved late on Sunday by a 5-4 majority within the nine-member ministerial committee responsible for preparing draft legislation to put to parliament.

“Since there have been occasions in the past when talks have begun on handing over parts of the city, we must legislate to ensure that this possibility does not arise” without a two-thirds majority, which “cannot be achieved easily,” the text reads.

Livni, who serves as justice minister and heads the centrist HaTnuah, voted against the bill along with three other ministers, one from her party and two from the centrist Yesh Atid.

Were the bill to be passed, it would mean negotiators could not even begin discussing Jerusalem without first obtaining a mandate from two-thirds of MPs. “She is going to file an appeal today,” her spokeswoman Maya Bengel said, without giving further details. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose government has been conducting direct talks with the Palestinians over the past two months following a three-year negotiation freeze, reportedly opposes the bill. Livni’s appeal means the bill will now be put to the full 22-member cabinet, in a move that will significantly reduce its chances of going forward as the final decision on whether to put it to a vote will be in Netanyahu’s hands, Maariv newspaper reported.

The two sides resumed direct talks for the first time in nearly three years in Washington at the end of July, following intense US pressure.AFP