US Vice President Pence meets Israeli PM Netanyahu during Jerusalem visit

US Vice President Mike Pence (C-L) is welcomed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C-R) at a ceremony at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem on January 22, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 22 January 2018
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US Vice President Pence meets Israeli PM Netanyahu during Jerusalem visit

JERUSALEM: US Vice President Mike Pence pointedly referred to Jerusalem as Israel’s capital on Monday and said the US embassy would open there by next year, as he met the country’s leader, further vexing Palestinians who have already snubbed his visit over a US policy shift toward the holy city. And Pence urged Palestine to rejoin the peace talks.
President Donald Trump last month acknowledged Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and said he would move the US embassy there — dismaying Palestinians who claim the eastern part of the city and angering Arab states across the region.
Pence, who is part-way through an official visit to the Middle East, said in Egypt on Saturday and again in Jordan on Sunday that Washington would support a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians if they both agreed to it.
On Monday he said he was honored to be “in Israel’s capital, Jerusalem” at the start of talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Echoing that sentiment, Netanyahu told the vice president. “This is the first time that I stand here where both leaders can say those three words: ‘Israel’s capital Jerusalem.’“
Pence said Trump’s declaration, which most of America’s main allies beyond the Middle East have also criticized, provided new opportunities for Israeli-Palestinian peace.
“I also am here hopeful that we are at the dawn of a new era of renewed discussions to achieve a peaceful resolution to the decades-long conflict that has affected this region,” Pence said.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has called the declaration a “slap in the face,” left for an overseas visit before the vice president’s arrival.
“The American recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and the occupation are illegitimate. The American administration must not contribute to escalating the situation further,” said Nabil Abu Rdainah, a spokesman for Abbas, after Pence’s remarks.
Palestinians want East Jerusalem, including the walled Old City with its holy sites, as capital of their own future state.
Israel, which annexed East Jerusalem after capturing it in 1967 in a move not internationally recognized, regards all of the city as its “eternal and indivisible capital.”

NO PALESTINIAN TRIPS
Pence, an evangelical Christian who has been vocal on the subject of protecting Christians in the Middle East, is not scheduled to make any private trips to Palestinian areas such as Bethlehem, a city whose Christian significance usually draws Western dignitaries.
US officials have said an embassy move from Tel Aviv could take up to three years. But there has been speculation that Pence could announce a stop-gap arrangement, such as the conversion of one of the US consulate buildings in Jerusalem to a de facto embassy.
“Will you do it by next year?” Pence and Netanyahu were asked by a reporter about an embassy move.
“We’ll do it next week,” Netanyahu responded jokingly. Pressed on whether he was serious, Netanyahu said he was not, but added, “We want to do it.”
Netanyahu has said he expected at least an interim arrangement to go into effect very soon, perhaps within a year.
Trump has made no firm public commitment on timing.
With the Palestinians boycotting Pence, his visit provides little obvious opportunity to build bridges toward peace.
But it gave Pence and Netanyahu, a right-winger who has hailed US evangelicals for their support of Israel, an opportunity to highlight their own warm relationship for a conservative American Christian community that serves as a power base for Trump and his vice president.
Later on Monday, Pence will address the Israeli parliament, whose Arab members said they would boycott the event. On Tuesday, he will attend Judaism’s Western Wall in Jerusalem and lay a wreath at the Yad Vashem Holocaust remembrance center in the city.


Alexandria bids farewell to historic tram in latest urban upheaval

Updated 7 sec ago
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Alexandria bids farewell to historic tram in latest urban upheaval

  • For over 160 years, the tram has cut through Alexandria’s heart, in an 11-kilometer stretch that includes many of the city’s schools and main universities

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt: Along Egypt’s Mediterranean coast, the oldest tram in Africa and the Middle East rumbles for a final few weeks before its removal — the latest urban upheaval Alexandrians say is hollowing out their city’s identity.
Government plans to replace the colorful streetcars on one of the city’s routes with a partially elevated light rail line have angered Alexandrians, for whom the 163-year-old track is “heritage, not just a means of transport,” local urban researcher Nahla Saleh told AFP.
Inaugurated in 1863, the tram is one of the world’s oldest, and among only a few to operate double-decker cars.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, it helped the city become a bustling metropolis, home to sizable European diasporas and a distinct cosmopolitan culture.
Now, Egyptians young and old have flocked for farewell rides, before the streetcars come to a halt in April.
As one locomotive screeches into the old El-Raml Station, commuters and visitors crane their necks out of giant windows at the historic neo-Venetian buildings overhead.
“We’re not against progress,” psychologist and writer on culture Mona Lamloum told AFP.
She and other Alexandrians agree the tramway needs work: inside the hand-calligraphied blue exterior, grime covers every surface. Underfoot, the rubber flooring is torn and strewn with trash.
“We just have bad experiences of everything they call ‘progress’ becoming synonymous with destruction,” Lamloum said.
In recent years, development projects in Egypt’s second city have razed historic parks and — most egregiously to locals — privatised and obstructed much of its Mediterranean coastline.

- Heart of Alexandria -

For over 160 years, the tram has cut through Alexandria’s heart, in an 11-kilometer stretch that includes many of the city’s schools and main universities.
The new project, led by Egyptian and international companies including Systra, Hyundai and Hitachi, promises to double speed and triple capacity.
Over half of it will be elevated — a major concern for Alexandrians who fear the tree-lined track will be replaced by eyesore concrete stilts.
Ahead of the first phase of suspension, the transport ministry said the new project was the “only solution to the city’s traffic problems.”
Locals like Saleh and Lamloum disagree, saying government plans are making the city more car-dependent and worsening traffic.
Already, because so many students rely on the tram, the city has staggered school and university hours to pick up the slack of the partial shutdown.
“Traffic’s getting worse, people can’t get anywhere, when we’ve already lost the inner-city train,” said Saleh, referring to another project under construction for the past two years, the new Alexandria Metro Line.
“Besides, it being slow was always an advantage,” she added, making it safe for “the most vulnerable in society: children and the elderly.”
Retired science teacher Hisham Abdelwahab, 64, has been riding the tram since he was a child.
“I don’t want it to go fast, I like watching the world go by,” he told AFP on a station bench.
“Our parents never thought twice about sending us out on the tram alone. Now I have a car, I just like leaving it parked to come ride the tram.”
When the next streetcar rolls in, the upper deck fills with a gaggle of schoolgirls, squabbling over who gets the window seat closest to the sea breeze.

- The old tram and the sea -

“This tram is our heritage,” Abdelwahab said, his sentiment shared by those several decades younger.
Engineering student Mahmoud Bassam, 24, has visited Alexandria just to ride the streetcar “since our tram in Cairo was removed,” he told AFP.
With a controversial slew of bridges and widened streets completed in 2020, Cairo’s historic Heliopolis neighborhood lost its last tram tracks, along with many of its trees.
“Now the same is happening here,” Bassam lamented.
Many Alexandrians are feeling the loss, intermingled with their other most treasured heritage.
“It’s like the sea. We used to go for long scenic drives on the corniche, but now we’re losing both the sea and the tram,” Abdelwahab said.
Parallel to the tramway, much of Alexandria’s iconic corniche is now hidden behind overpasses, private businesses and beachside food courts.
By 2024, over half of the city’s Mediterranean coastline had disappeared from view, according to a study by the Human and the City for Social Research center.
Four-lane highways now dominate long stretches of the seaside, where the landmark sight of fishermen perched over the waves grows ever-rarer.
For many, the waterfront that Lebanese singer Fairouz immortalized in 1961 — crooning about “the coast of Alexandria, coast of love” — is no more.
“Now all you see is concrete,” said Lamloum.
Saleh calls it “short-sighted” that the city could lose its charm to sprawling concrete.
“Tourists used to love coming to see the tram and sit by the sea, why take away both?“