Saudi Arabia Applauds Brotherly Nations’ Rejection of Netanyahu’s Remarks on Palestinian Displacement

General

Riyadh: The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia appreciates the condemnation, disapproval, and total rejection announced by the brotherly countries towards what Benjamin Netanyahu stated regarding the displacement of the Palestinian people from their land. The Kingdom values the positions that emphasize the centrality of the Palestinian issue to the Arab and Muslim countries.

According to Saudi Press Agency, the Kingdom stresses its categorical rejection of such statements that aim to divert attention from the continuous crimes committed by the Israeli occupation against the Palestinian brothers in Gaza, including the ethnic cleansing they are subjected to.

The Kingdom also highlights that this extremist, occupying mentality fails to understand what the Palestinian land means to the brotherly people of Palestine and their emotional, historical, and legal connection to this land. It criticizes the perception that the Palestinian people do not deserve to live, citing the destruction of the Gaza Strip and the casualties exceeding 160,000, primarily affecting children and women.

The Kingdom affirms that the Palestinian people have a right to their land and are not intruders or immigrants who can be expelled at the whim of the Israeli occupation.

The Kingdom notes that the proponents of extremist ideas are responsible for preventing Israel from accepting peace by rejecting peaceful coexistence, dismissing peace initiatives by Arab countries, and systematically practicing injustice towards the Palestinian people for over 75 years, ignoring truth, justice, law, and values established in the United Nations Charter, including the right to live in dignity on one's land.

The Kingdom reiterates that the right of the Palestinian people will remain firmly established, and no one will be able to take it away, regardless of how long it takes. The Kingdom asserts that lasting peace will only be achieved by returning to the logic of reason and accepting the principle of peaceful coexistence through a two-state solution.