Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah yesterday dismissed an Israeli proposal for direct negotiations instead of a French multilateral peace initiative, calling it an attempt to “buy time”.
Hamdallah made the comments as he met French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, who held talks in Israel and the Palestinian territories this week to push Paris’s peace initiative.
“Time is short,” Hamdallah said. “(Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu is trying to buy time... but this time he will not escape the international community.”
Referring to the 1990s Oslo accords and their aftermath, he said “there have been negotiations for 22 years and they’ve led nowhere.”
Netanyahu has rejected the plan and called for direct negotiations.
Valls told Netanyahu when he met him on Monday that he would discuss his proposal with French President Francois Hollande, but he has insisted that Paris plans to stick with its approach.
The French initiative involves holding a meeting of foreign ministers from a range of countries, including US Secretary of State John Kerry, on June 3, but without the Israelis and Palestinians present.
An international conference would then be held in the autumn, with the Israelis and Palestinians in attendance.
The goal is to eventually relaunch negotiations that would lead to a Palestinian state.
Negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians have been at a standstill since a US-led initiative collapsed in April 2014.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has welcomed the French plan, but Netanyahu has repeatedly expressed his opposition while saying he is willing to meet Abbas at any time.
On Monday, he told Valls that France should host a summit between the pair in Paris.
Palestinian leaders say years of negotiations with Israel have not ended its occupation, and they have pursued a strategy of diplomacy at international bodies.
Valls departed yesterday with little having changed - Palestinian support and Israeli opposition were known before his visit - though Netanyahu could face pressure to soften his stance if the initiative gains momentum.
“The simple fact that the June 3 meeting will occur creates hope,” Valls said, adding that the two-state solution must be kept alive despite “immense difficulty.”
Valls has sought to address Israeli concerns over the French initiative, saying it would not try to impose a solution and that negotiations between the two sides would ultimately resolve the conflict.
He has called himself a “friend of Israel” during his trip, and said Israeli security must be guaranteed.
But he has also criticised Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank, considered to be a major stumbling block to peace.
Jewish settlements in the West Bank are considered illegal under international law and are built on land the Palestinians see as part of their future state.
Some 600,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem in constant tension with 2.8mn Palestinians.
More than 60% of the West Bank is under complete Israeli control.
Those arguing for a new peace effort say the lack of any initiative leaves a vacuum that can be filled by hardliners on either side.
There has also been talk of the potential for a Cairo-led plan that could result in a summit between Abbas and Netanyahu, with ties between Israel and Egypt having improved in recent months.
An upsurge in violence since October has killed 205 Palestinians and 28 Israelis.