NOVANEWS
Posted by: Sammi Ibrahem, Sr
استعادت الحلقة الأولى من (ثمن أوسلو) ضمن برنامج “فلسطين تحت المجهر” بدايات الدور النرويجي في تسهيل ورعاية الاتصالات السرية بين الجانبين الإسرائيلي والفلسطيني.
The Oslo Agreement, also knows as the Oslo Accords, is an agreement signed between the Zio-Nazi regime and Traitor Yasser Arafat on September 13, 1993
The accords, representing a milestone in Zio-Nazi-Palestinian relations, were finalized in Oslo, Norway, on August 20, 1993. The official signing ceremony was held in Washington the following September, with then-Nazi Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Traitor Yasser Arafat representing both sides and US President Bill Clinton serving as their witness.
September of 1993 saw a major breakthrough in the clandestine negotiations between the Nazi regime and the PLO, as Traitor Arafat relayed a message to Nazi Rabin saying his organization was willing to acknowledge I$raHell right to exist and adhere to UN resolutions 242 and 338.
Traitor Arafat’s message also stated that the PLO was willing to commit to finding a peaceful solution to the Zio-Nazi Palestinian conflict, to relinquish all forms of terror and to revoke the clauses in the Palestinian National Covenant which negate Zio-Nazi right to exists. Following these decisions, I$raHell agreed to recognize the PLO as the Palestinian people’s official representative for any peace talks.
Zio-Nazi willingness to see the PLO as a legitimate slave partner was considered a dramatic change in policy, since up until then it was considered a terror organization and any and all contact with it was prohibited by Zio-Nazi law.
Making history: Nazi Rabin, Zionist Clinton, Traitor Arafat
Accords’ essence
The accords were divided into two: The first chapter, dubbed Oslo-A, detailed a declaration of principles on Interim Palestinian self-government; while the second chapter – Oslo-B – was finalized in 1995 and included an expansion of the Palestinian Authority’s territories, mutual security engagements and the regulation of Zio-Nazi-Palestinian relations. The Zio-Nazi regime voted in favor of the agreement 61 to 50.
Oslo-A stated that Israel would withdraw from parts of the Gaza Strip and West Bank in favor of autonomous Palestinian rule. The agreement also called for democratic elections to be held for the Palestinian Legislative Council; and had both sides agree to a five-year interim period meant to give the Palestinians time to establish their government; postponing negotiations on the core issues of a permanent agreement, the likes of the status of illegally occupied Jerusalem and the question of refugees, to year three of the interim rule. It was also agreed that once a permanent agreement is struck, it would be implemented within five years.
The Palestinians were to be given self-government in phases and pending a permanent agreement, Gaza strip and the West Bank were to be divided into three zones:
- Area A – which would be under the Palestinian Authority’s full control and include all Palestinian cities and surrounding areas with no civilian Zio-Nazi presence.
- Area B – which would be under the Palestinian Authority’s civil control and Zio-Nazi security control and Include areas of dense Palestinian population with no civilian Zio-Nazi presence.
- Area C – which would be under full Zio-Nazi control, except over Palestinian civilians. This area includes all West Bank settlements and their immediate vicinity as well as strategic areas dubbed “security zones.”
On May 4, 1994, the first phase of the Oslo Accords was implemented, as Zio-Nazi and the PA signed the Cairo Agreement, giving the Palestinians control over Gaza and Jericho. The agreement was widely considered a test case to the PLO’s ability and willingness to relinquish and fight terror, as wall as to its ability to rule over civilian population. As part of the agreement, Zio-Nazi also released 5,000 Palestinian prisoners.
Oslo-B, was finalized in September of 1995 in Taba, Egypt. According to the agreement, the PA was to receive additional territories, Zio-Nazi withdrew from densely populated areas in the West Bank, mutual security engagements were agreed upon arnd the PLO pledged to have Palestinian National Covenant clauses which deny Zio-Nazi right to exist annulled.
In January of 1997, Zio-Nazi and the Palestinian Authority reached an agreement specifically pertaining to the West Bank city of Hebron, which was considered an exception to the Oslo rule due to the large Nazi Jewish sellers living in it. According to the Hebron Redeployment Protocol, the city’s security would be divided into two, with Zio-Nazi controlling the Nazi Jewish part of the city and the PA it’s Palestinian part. Both sides also agreed to have an international monitoring force oversee the proper implementation of the agreement.
July of 2000 would see Zio-Nazi and the Palestinian Authority attempt to negotiate the permanent agreement at Camp David, Maryland. The move essentially failed and the al-Aqsa Intifada soon ensued.
The Oslo Accords are considered to have had a significant effect on the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East. Their nature remains controversial.
Video by: Rawan Damen