Palestinian president suspends all deals with Israel
The decision came after Israeli forces teared down scores of Palestinian homes in the occupied East Jerusalem despite international outcry.
Palestine's President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday evening announced that all agreements signed with Israel have been suspended.
Mechanisms will be set in order to implement the decision, Abbas said after a meeting of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in Ramallah city of the occupied West Bank.
"We will not bow to dictates and imposing a fait accompli by force in Jerusalem and elsewhere," he said, apparently in reference to Israeli government’s recent demolition of dozens of Palestinian houses in occupied East Jerusalem.
The Palestinian president said the move comes after the insistence of the Israeli occupation authority to ignore the signed agreements with the Palestinian side.
Abbas called on the international community to take a stand on Israeli violations in the Palestinian territories.
He affirmed it was time to implement the Cairo 2017 agreement brokered by Egypt, referring to a reconciliation deal signed between Palestinian political parties Hamas and Fatah.
Demolition of Palestinian homes
On Monday, bulldozers accompanied by hundreds of Israeli soldiers moved into the neighbourhood of Wadi Homs in East Jerusalem and began to raze several buildings in the area.
Israeli authorities claim that the buildings were constructed without a permit.
Israel occupied East Jerusalem, where the flashpoint Al Aqsa Mosque compound is located, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.
In a move never recognised by the international community, Israel annexed the entire city in 1980, claiming it the self-proclaimed Jewish state’s “eternal and undivided” capital.
Jerusalem remains at the heart of the decades-long Middle East dispute, with Palestinians hoping that East Jerusalem might one day serve as the capital of a Palestinian state.