Riyadh: Saudi Arabia firmly condemned the statements of the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday, calling them to distract them in the Palestinians in the course of Israel in Gaza.
In a statement, the Saudi Foreign Ministry rejected “such declarations which aim to divert the attention of continuous crimes committed by the Israeli occupation against the Palestinian brothers in Gaza, including the ethnic cleansing to which they are subject.”
Riyadh also congratulated the general condemnation of the Arab nations, highlighting a unified rejection of the comments of Netanyahu.
“The kingdom underlines that this extremist and occupying mentality does not take into account the deeply rooted, emotional and legal Palestinian people with their land,” said the press release. “He refuses to recognize their right to exist and implacably targeted them, killing and injuring more than 160,000 – women and children – without remorse.”
Saudi Arabia has reaffirmed that the Palestinians are not “intruders or immigrants” to expel the will of Israel. Instead, he accused supporters of these extremist views of obstruction to peace by rejecting the initiatives led by Arabic and by systematically oppressing Palestinians for more than 75 years, in violation of international law and principles of The UN.
The ministry insisted that Palestinian rights remain “firmly established and cannot be erased”, affirming that sustainable peace depends on a return to reason and the acceptance of a two -state solution.
Neighboring Arab states have also sentenced Netanyahu’s statements. Egypt labeled them “irresponsible” and a direct violation of Saudi sovereignty, qualifying the security of the “red line” kingdom. Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs described remarks as “inflammatory” and “a clear violation of international law”, warning that such a rhetoric undermines regional stability.
The water also denounced Netanyahu’s remarks as “reprehensible and provocative”, reaffirming his categorical rejection of any suggestion of a Palestinian state on Saudi land.