Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz made a rare appearance by a high-ranking Israeli official in the occupied West Bank on Monday to sign an agreement on electricity with the Palestinian Authority.
Steinitz attended the ceremony in Jalamah near the northern West Bank city of Jenin alongside Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah.
They announced a boost in electricity supply in the area that comes with a payment guarantee from the Palestinians and unveiled a new substation.
The ceremony was held with a top adviser to US President Donald Trump, Jason Greenblatt, set to hold another round of meetings in Israel and the Palestinian territories in the coming days.
Trump’s administration has urged Israel to take measures to improve the Palestinian economy as he seeks ways to restart peace talks.
“Of course we hope to achieve peace and security; it is important for all nations — but meanwhile it is important also to improve the infrastructure,” Steinitz said.
Hamdallah said “we do not want to depend on Israel forever”.
“We are about to build a power plant in Jenin that will generate 450 megawatts in the Jenin area. I hope this power plant will start operating in 2020.”
But the ceremony came in stark contrast to a severe electricity shortage in the Gaza Strip, the other Palestinian territory run by Islamist movement Hamas.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, whose Fatah is based in the West Bank, has sought to pressure his rivals from Hamas in recent months notably by withholding payments for electricity.
Israel recently reduced its supply of electricity to the Gaza Strip after Abbas slashed the payments.
The cut left the impoverished territory of more than two million people with as little as two hours of mains electricity a day.
As an interim measure, Egypt stepped in to deliver fuel to Gaza’s sole power plant, but Hamas at the weekend accused Abbas’s Palestinian Authority of blocking fuel payments to Egypt.
Israel coordinates with the Palestinian Authority, but not Hamas, which it considers a terrorist organisation.
Monday’s agreement will lead to an increase in electricity supply to the West Bank’s Jenin area by 60 megawatts, according to COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry unit that oversees civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories.
The West Bank relies almost completely on Israel for its electricity supply and payment disputes have led to blackouts in the past.
Such visits by an Israeli minister are extremely rare.
In May, Israeli Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon met Hamdallah in Ramallah.
Before that, no Israeli member of the internal security cabinet had met a Palestinian official in a West Bank city since 2000, an Israeli official said.
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