
Saudi Arabia, Türkiye Discuss Regional Developments
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah held talks in Riyadh on Sunday with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan.
They tackled means to bolster cooperation between their countries in various fields and discussed regional developments.
They chaired the second Saudi-Turkish Coordination Council meeting with talks focusing on intensifying mechanisms of bilateral cooperation in various sectors and efforts to bolster joint coordination on issues of common interest.
A memorandum of understanding was signed on cooperation in diplomatic training between the Saudi Foreign Ministry's Prince Saud Al Faisal Institute for Diplomatic Studies and Türkiye's Diplomacy Academy.
The Saudi-Turkish Coordination Council was set up in 2016 and is chaired by the foreign ministers of both countries. It aims to follow up on bilateral relations within a comprehensive framework that covers all aspects of cooperation.
It held its first meeting in Ankara in February 2017. It boasts the diplomacy and politics by-committee, another on military and security affairs, one on culture, sports, media and tourism, one on social development, health and education and one on trade, industry, investment, infrastructure and energy.
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Daoud Kuttab Furthermore, Israel continues to withhold Palestinian tax revenues it collects under the Israel-Palestine Memorandum of Understanding. While this agreement, often referred to as the Oslo Accords, allowed a 3 percent administrative handling fee, Israel is legally obligated to transfer the remainder of the monies collected to the Palestinian government. Instead, it is unjustifiably holding 7 billion shekels, roughly $2 billion. President Abbas and his newly appointed deputy, Al-Sheikh, have bent over backward to address Israeli objections, including the unpopular cessation of stipends to families of prisoners and martyrs. But even this painful concession has not resulted in the release of funds. As a consequence, Palestinian public servants have been forced to accept a fraction of their salaries just ahead of the Eid Al-Adha holiday. The multifaceted Israeli campaign — against refugee camps, the Palestinian government and any role for Ramallah in postwar Gaza — is aimed at crippling, if not eradicating, the Palestinian national entity centered in Ramallah. Arab and Muslim leaders, along with the global community, must persist in upholding Palestinian national rights. Daoud Kuttab By the end of 2024, the state of Palestine had been recognized by 146 countries, with several others, including Western nations, preparing to follow suit. The international community must do far more to uphold Palestinian nationalism and the right of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem to live in freedom, free of occupation, settlements and colonial control. The plans for Arab and Muslim leaders, traveling by Jordanian military helicopter, to visit the Palestinian presidency in Ramallah were blocked by the Israeli occupying powers. 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While national elections are essential, immediate steps can be taken to heal divisions and rebuild the Palestinian national movement. This will require compromise, including a strategic shift by armed factions from military struggle to unified political and popular resistance. Arab and Muslim leaders, along with the global community, must persist in upholding Palestinian national rights. The denial of the foreign ministers' entry to Ramallah should not be forgotten but rather serve as a reminder that this conflict did not begin in October 2023. And that the fate of detainees on both sides is not the only barrier to a just and lasting peace. Palestinian statehood is the most logical and lasting solution to the decades-long conflict in the Middle East.