WED 8 - 5 - 2024
 
Date: Mar 5, 2019
Source: The Daily Star
Flag comes down on U.S. Palestinian mission in Jerusalem
Reuters
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM: The United States lowered the flag Monday at the Jerusalem consulate that had served as its diplomatic channel to Palestine, merging the mission with the new U.S Embassy to Israel in the contested city.

The Palestinians, who have boycotted the Trump administration since it shifted long-standing U.S. policy in December 2017 by recognizing Israeli-occupied Jerusalem as Israel's capital, voiced anger at what they see as Washington's latest move against them.

Whereas previously the consulate reported on Palestinian matters directly to Washington, its staff have now been repurposed in the embassy as a "Palestinian Affairs Unit" under the U.S. ambassador to Israel, David Friedman.

"This is the last nail in the coffin" of peacemaking, veteran Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said on Twitter.

At the ornate consulate on Agron Street in downtown Jerusalem, the flag ceremony was kept low key under grey winter skies. Friedman, who helped spearhead May's relocation of the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to a different converted consular building in South Jerusalem, was not present.

U.S. officials said the Stars and Stripes banner was taken down and presented to departing consul Karen Sasahara as a farewell gift, in keeping with foreign service custom, after which another U.S. flag was run up.

The U.S. State Department said the merger was driven by operational efficiency and did not signal any change in policy.

"Our work and our team will continue to work on reaching peace in this land," Sasahara said on YouTube.

U.S. officials told Reuters last month that the Agron street building, immediately upon consulate operations ending, would serve as the ambassador's official residence.

But that plan appeared to have slowed. On Monday, the consulate plaque had been removed from the building facade, leaving a blank space.

The U.S. consulate in Jerusalem had dated back 175 years, to when the city - holy to Jews, Christians and Muslims – was under Ottoman rule.

Israeli-Palestinian talks collapsed in 2014 and the White House says it intends to present a new peace plan after a national election in Israel in April.

Israel deems all of Jerusalem, including the eastern sector it captured in the 1967 Middle East War, as its undivided capital.

Washington has avoided such language, however, signaling that the final status of the city should be negotiated by the sides.


 
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