Ahmed Qureia, key Palestinian negotiator in Oslo accords with Israel, dies at 85
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Ahmed Qureia, a former Palestinian Authority prime minister and one of the architects of interim peace deals with Israel, has died. He was 85.
A key player in the 1993 Oslo peace accords, Qureia witnessed the rise of the dream of Palestinian statehood that surged during the negotiations. But he also saw those hopes recede, with the prospect of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict drifting further than ever. Domestically, Qureia was plagued by corruption charges that tainted his reputation.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas confirmed Qureia’s death Wednesday. The cause of death was not immediately disclosed, but Qureia had been ill for some time with a heart condition.
“Abu Alaa stood in the lead defending the causes of his home and people,” Abbas, referring to Qureia by his nom de guerre, said in a statement carried by the official Wafa news agency.
Born in 1937 in Abu Dis, a suburb of East Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, Qureia joined the Fatah movement in 1968.
He rose quickly through the ranks under the leadership of its founder, late Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, and became a member of its decision-making body, the Central Committee, in 1989. He was also a member of the PLO Executive Committee.
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Qureia headed the Palestinian delegation to Oslo, where intensive talks with Israel led to the peace accords in 1993 that created the Palestinian Authority and set up self-rule areas in the Palestinian territories. During ensuing rounds of negotiations, he met all Israeli prime ministers from the signing of the accords through 2004, including Yitzhak Rabin, Ariel Sharon, Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Olmert, and Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush.
Peace talks have collapsed in the three decades since the Oslo accords. Israel has ramped up the building of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and imposed a blockade on the Gaza Strip after the Islamic militant group Hamas routed forces loyal to Fatah and took power there. Violence is again flaring up between the sides, especially in the West Bank.
In a 2013 interview with the Associated Press marking two decades since the Oslo agreements, Qureia said that, if he knew at the time of the accords what he knew in 2013, he wouldn’t have agreed to them.
“With such kinds of blocs of settlements? No. With the closure of Jerusalem? No. Not at all,” Qureia said in an interview at his office in Abu Dis.
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After the establishment of the Palestinian Authority, Qureia won a seat in the first parliamentary elections in 1996 and chaired the Palestinian Legislative Council.
After Abbas resigned as the PA’s first prime minister in 2003, Arafat replaced him with Qureia. He held the post until 2006, when Hamas scored a landslide victory in the second Palestinian elections.
During his tenure as prime minister, Qureia was the subject of controversy after reports accused his family of having financial interest in a company that sold Egyptian cement to Israel, which the latter used to build the West Bank separation barrier.
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