Vatican to sign first accord with State of Palestine

File photo shows Pope Francis (R) talks with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas during a private audience at the Vatican.
File photo shows Pope Francis (R) talks with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas during a private audience at the Vatican.
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AFP, Vatican City :The Vatican said Wednesday it was preparing to sign its first accord with Palestine, two years after officially recognising it as a state.”The bilateral commission of the Holy See and the State of Palestine, which is working on a comprehensive agreement” on the life and activity of the Catholic Church in Palestine, is putting the final touches to the treaty, the Vatican said.”The agreement will be submitted to the respective authorities for approval ahead of setting a debate in the near future for the signing.” While it will be the first time the Roman Catholic Church signs a treaty with the State of Palestine, the Vatican has recognised the state since February 2013.”The Holy See has identified the State of Palestine as such since the vote” by the UN general assembly to recognise it in November 2012, Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi told AFP.”In its annual directory the Palestinian representative is referred to as the representative of the State of Palestine,” he said.Israel immediately reacted with displeasure to the news. “Israel heard with disappointment the decision of the Holy See to agree a final formulation of an agreement with the Palestinians including the use of the term ‘Palestinian State’,” an Israeli foreign ministry official said in an unsigned statement.”Such a development does not further the peace process and distances the Palestinian leadership from returning to direct bilateral negotiations. Israel will study the agreement and consider its next step,” the official said.The agreement, 15 years in the making, may be signed this weekend during a visit by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to the Vatican for the canonization of two new Palestinian saints.It expresses the Vatican’s “hope for a solution to the Palestinian question and the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians according to the Two-State Solution,” said Antoine Camilleri, the Holy See’s deputy foreign minister.

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