French FM: Israeli response to attack could ‘raise tensions’

French FM: Israeli response to attack could ‘raise tensions’

By | 2016-06-18T17:02:20-04:00 June 18th, 2016|News|0 Comments
French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault warned on Friday that Israel’s decision to bar Palestinians 
 
from entering its territory following the Tel Aviv attack could raise tensions and lead to more violence, 
 
AFP reports.
 
“The decision by the Israeli authorities today to revoke tens of thousands of entry permits could stoke 
 
tensions which could lead to a risk of escalation,” said Ayrault.
 
“We must be careful about anything that could stoke tensions,” Ayrault told reporters at UN 
 
headquarters.
 
His comments came in response to Israel’s actions following the attack in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, which 
 
included freezing work entry visas for some 204 members of the attackers’ extended family.
 
Israel also rescinded some 83,000 entry permits given to Arabs from Judea and Samaria for Ramadan. 
 
Goodwill gestures to Gaza Arabs, including travel permits to Jerusalem to participate in Ramadan prayers 
 
on the Temple Mount, were also rescinded.
 
Israel also imposed a general closure on Palestinian Authority-assigned of Judea and Samaria during the 
 
Shavuot holiday.
 
Ayrault was at the United Nations to take part in a Security Council debate on the protection of civilians 
 
in peacekeeping, a week after France hosted an international meeting in Paris on reviving the peace 
 
process.
 
“There must be a political initiative from the international community to create conditions conducive to 
 
appeasement and a return to negotiations,” said the foreign minister, according to AFP.
 
“France is always working for the security of Israel,” he stressed.
 
The Paris meeting brought together representatives from 29 countries and international organizations to 
 
agree on the way to re-start talks that have been comatose since a US peace initiative collapsed in April 
 
2014.
 
Ayrault’s comments are similar to those of the State Department, whose spokesman Mark Toner on 
 
Thursday called on Israel not to “punish innocent Palestinians” in response to the attack.
 
Meanwhile on Friday, United Nations rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein’s office issued a mild 

 

a mild condemnation of the attack itself, but then went on to say that he was “deeply concerned” by Israel’s 
 
response.
 
The Jewish state’s reaction “includes measures that may amount to prohibited collective punishment and 
 
will only increase the sense of injustice and frustration felt by Palestinians in this very tense time,” the 
 
statement said.