The Palestinian Authority and various radical Palestinian groups Monday
condemned Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s remark that Jerusalem
is the capital of Israel.
The radical groups called for boycotting
Romney.
A senior Fatah official also criticized PA Prime Minister Salam
Fayyad for meeting Sunday evening with Romney in Jerusalem, noting that the
presidential candidate had not included Ramallah in his recent tour.
The
official told The Jerusalem Post that Romney’s refusal to meet with PA President
Mahmoud Abbas during his visit to the area was “unacceptable.” Romney, the Fatah
official said, “apparently does not recognize President Abbas as the elected
president of the Palestinians.”
Fayyad was quoted on Monday as saying
that this was the second time he had met with Romney. He said he had met with
him not on a personal basis but in his capacity as prime minister of the
PA.
The meeting was almost completely ignored by PAcontrolled media
outlets.
Some news websites reported the meeting only after it was
mentioned in the Israeli media.
Hamas and other groups expressed outrage
over the meeting. Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum accused Romney of insulting the
feelings of Palestinians and Muslims by declaring that Jerusalem is the capital
of Israel during his visit.
“These are racist and extremist statements
that deny the rights of the Palestinian people,” Barhoum said. “His statements
distort and forge history and mislead public opinion.”
The Hamas
spokesman claimed that Romney’s statement gave Israel a green light to Judaize
Jerusalem and build more settlements.
“Jerusalem is the capital of the
Palestinians and Palestine and we will never give it up,” he
stressed.
Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP) and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP)
also denounced Romney’s remarks about Jerusalem and called for a boycott of the
candidate.
Daoud Shehab, a spokesman for Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip,
said Palestinians and Arabs were mistaken in pinning hopes on any US
administration. He said Romney’s statements would not change the fact that
Jerusalem “belongs to the Palestinians and will be restored sooner or
later.”
Talal Abu Zarifeh, a DFLP official, said Romney’s position on
Jerusalem “contradicts international laws and resolutions which consider the
city part of the territories that were occupied in 1967.”
He urged all
Arab and Islamic countries to exert pressure on the Americans to stop their
“blind bias in favor of Israel.”
Jamil Muzher, a member of the PFLP, said
his group believed that there was no real difference between Democrats and
Republicans.
“The two parties are competing to show which is more loyal
to Israel,” he charged.