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News ID: 59314
Publish Date : 05 November 2018 - 21:24
Jordan:

Zionist Regime Wants to Discuss ‘Border’, Land Deals




AMMAN (Dispatches) – Jordan says the Zionist regime has asked for consultations on a special land deal agreed upon in their so-called "peace treaty” that the Jordanian government wants to end.
Under the peace treaty, two areas were recognized to be under Jordanian sovereignty but gave the occupying regime special provisions to use the land and allow Zionists free access.
Jordan formally notified the regime two weeks ago it would not renew the 25-year deal over Baquora where the Yarmouk River flows into the Jordan River and in the Ghumar area in the southern Wadi Araba desert where Zionist farmers have large plantations.
Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi told Reuters after the decision the kingdom was waiting for the regime to invoke a provision in the treaty to hold consultations after giving notice before the deadline.
Petra state news agency quoted government spokeswoman Jumana Ghunaimat as saying Jordan had received the request by the regime but did not say when the discussions would begin.
Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledged Jordan’s move and said the regime sought to enter negotiations on the possibility of extending the arrangement.
The 25-year special regime would be automatically renewed unless either of the parties notified the other a year before expiry that it wished to terminate the agreement.
Safadi said the deal, which was signed in November 1994, had been conceived as a temporary arrangement from the start. The kingdom had contemplated the move for a while before the Nov. 10 deadline.
King Abdullah, who stressed the territories were Jordanian lands and would remain so, said the move was made in the "national interest” at a period of regional turmoil.
Jordan is one of only two Arab states that has a "peace” treaty with the Zionist regime. But the treaty is unpopular in Jordan where pro-Palestinian sentiment is widespread.