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Bashar Masri, a prominent Palestinian businessman and founder of Rawabi, the first planned Palestinian city in the occupied West Bank, poses during an interview with Reuters in Rawabi, October 5, 2020. Image Credit: REUTERS

Rawabi, Occupied West Bank: A top Palestinian business executive said on Monday that new Gulf Arab ties with Israel, condemned by Palestinian leaders, could also be an opportunity to apply fresh pressure to halt Jewish colonies in occupied land.

Bashar Masri, a Palestinian-American who runs two of the Palestinians’ largest holding companies, said the Palestinians must find a way to turn agreements Israel struck last month with the UAE and Bahrain into “a positive thing for us”.

Under the US-brokered diplomatic push, Israel agreed to suspend plans to annex parts of the occupied West Bank.

Independent state

Palestinian leaders have called Arab agreements to normalise relations with Israel a blow to their quest for an independent state in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, territory Israel captured in a 1967 war.

Masri, 59, said the Palestinian message to the UAE and Bahrain should now be: “Hey, why don’t you pressure Israel, who you’re talking to, to stop the settlements [colonies]?”.

“I hope they can turn these agreements to pressure Israel into concessions for the Palestinians,” he said.

But Masri, chairman of Massar International, told Reuters he was uncertain that halting colonies expansion in the West Bank would be a priority.

Most countries view the colonies that Israel has built on occupied land as illegal. Israel has hailed ties with the UAE and Bahrain as a major business opportunity, and Masri said Palestinian enterprises would not be inherently opposed to accepting investment from the two Gulf nations.

Massar International oversees and manages more than 30 subsidiaries and investments in finance, tech, agriculture, media and real estate, including Rawabi, the first planned Palestinian city in the West Bank.

Masri said that now that emotions over the deals have calmed down - “we burned the flags” - Palestinians have “no choice but to be optimistic”.

“Our enemies want us to give up hope. If we give up hope, they have exactly what they want, and there will be no Palestine, and no Palestinian people,” he said.