JERUSALEM: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has called the Nazi Holocaust “the most heinous crime” against humanity in modern times, in an apparent bid to build bridges with Israel days after collapse of troubled peace talks.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected the overture on Sunday and said Abbas’s power-sharing deal with Hamas, which led Israel to suspend the negotiations on Thursday, put him in partnership with a group that denied the Holocaust and sought the Jewish state’s destruction.
“What I say to him very simply is this: President Abbas, tear up your pact with Hamas,” Netanyahu said on the CBS news programme Face the Nation.
Abbas’s message, published in Arabic and English by the official Palestinian news agency WAFA, coincided with Israel’s annual remembrance day for the Jews killed in the Holocaust, and included an expression of sympathy for the families of the victims.
“What happened to the Jews in the Holocaust is the most heinous crime to have occurred against humanity in the modern era,” WAFA quoted Abbas as saying at a meeting a week ago with an American rabbi.
By speaking in superlative terms, Abbas could risk a backlash from Palestinians who draw comparisons between their suffering at the hands of Israeli occupiers and that of Jews under Hitler’s Third Reich.
Abbas has condemned the mass killings of Jews in World War Two before and challenged allegations, stemming from a 1983 book he authored, that he is a Holocaust denier.
But the timing of the publication of his latest comments gave them extra significance, a day after he signalled he remained committed to the peace talks and said a future Palestinian unity government would recognise Israel.
Palestinian officials have blamed Netanyahu for the peace impasse, noting he failed to carry out a pledged release of Palestinian prisoners and citing Israeli announcements of further construction in settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Netanyahu has said Abbas’s refusal to recognise Israel as a Jewish state blocked progress in talks aimed at ending decades of conflict and creating a Palestinian state.
The Palestinian unity accord followed seven years of failed reconciliation attempts after Hamas seized the Gaza Strip from forces loyal to Abbas in 2007. The agreement envisages the formation of a Palestinian government of non-political “technocrats” within five months and new elections six months later.
Hamas officials were not immediately available to comment on Netanyahu’s Holocaust-denial accusations.
But in an open letter to a senior UN official in 2009, Hamas branded the Holocaust “a lie invented by the Zionists”. Hamas was protesting UN plans at the time to start Holocaust studies for children in Gaza.—Reuters





























