Francois Hollande, the French president, has told Israeli MPs that
his country would not allow Iran to secure a nuclear weapon, saying
that such a situation was a threat to Israel and the region.
To loud applause inside the Israeli parliament, Hollande said: "We
have nothing against Iran, or its people, but we cannot allow Iran to
get nuclear arms as it is a threat to Israel and the region."
"We will maintain the sanctions as long as we are not certain that Iran has definitively renounced its military programme."
Al Jazeera's Mike Hanna, reporting from Jerusalem, said Hollande's comments were "words were music to Israeli ears".
On a future state of Palestine, Hollande told the Israeli parliament
that Jerusalem must be the future capital of both Israel and a future
Palestinian state.
"France's position is known: a negotiated settlement, with the state
of Israel and the state of Palestine both having Jerusalem as capital,
coexisting in peace and security," he said.
Israel seized and occupied East Jerusalem during the 1967 war and
later illegally annexed it. It views the entire city as its "eternal
and indivisible capital".
He had earlier called for a complete halt to Israel's illegally
building settlements on land the Palestinians want for a future state.
Speaking on his first official visit to the Palestinian territories,
Hollande said that settlement construction was problematic for peace
negotiations, which have been limping along for more than three months
with little sign of progress.
"France demands a full and
complete halt to settlement activity," he said in Ramallah in a joint
news conference with his Palestinian counterpart, Mahmoud Abbas.
"Settlement activity complicates the negotiations and makes it difficult to achieve a two-state solution," Hollande said.
Since Israeli and Palestinian negotiators returned to the table at
the end of July, Israel has made several announcements of thousands of
new settler homes, angering the Palestinian negotiators. The Israeli
prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has recently said those activities
were to be suspended.
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