Israel Publishes the Oslo Meeting Minutes

Israeli government session that approved the Oslo Accords (State Archive)
Israeli government session that approved the Oslo Accords (State Archive)
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Israel Publishes the Oslo Meeting Minutes

Israeli government session that approved the Oslo Accords (State Archive)
Israeli government session that approved the Oslo Accords (State Archive)

The Israeli State Archives allowed the publication of Yitzhak Rabin's government meeting minutes, at which the Oslo Accords were approved.

Haim Ramon, the Health Minister back then, stated that Ehud Barak and Benjamin Netanyahu caused the termination of the agreement and the outbreak of the Second Intifada.

Ramon said that the protocol clearly shows that Barak, then Chief of Staff of the Army, opposed the Oslo Accords from the beginning.

When he later became Minister of the Interior, Barak voted against the second part of the agreements and then announced in 1999 that there was no Palestinian partner for a peace process after the Camp David meetings.

Netanyahu declared that Israel can and will stop the Oslo process.

Later, in 1996, when he was elected prime minister, he abolished what remained of the Oslo agreement.

Ramon stressed that if Rabin had not been assassinated in 1995 and Israel had proceeded with his method, the second Intifada may not have erupted, and the Oslo agreement might have been successful.

Several other Israeli politicians who were ministers at that time echoed Ramon's assessment and agreed that Oslo was an adventure for Israel, but it also carried a historic missed opportunity.

Notably, the government session that approved these agreements was held on August 30, 1993, during a session headed by Rabin.

The 80-page transcript of that session remained "top secret" throughout this period. Publication of certain parts of the transcript remains forbidden for reasons of state security and may not take place for another 20 to 60 years.

- Fears of weapons

The declassified minutes reveal that of the 18 cabinet ministers at the time, 16 approved the Oslo Accords, and two abstained: Aryeh Deri and Shimon Sheetrit.

Deri and Sheetrit confirmed that they were negatively affected by the security doubts of Rabin, Barak, and even Shimon Peres, who feared weapons delivered to the Palestinian security apparatus and Hamas operations.

At the beginning of the session, Rabin said: "I want to start by saying this is not an easy agreement. Obviously, had we negotiated with ourselves, I'm sure the wording would have been far better. The text also includes unpleasant wording."

He stressed: "We must look much more comprehensively at all the different components."

Former Housing Minister Benjamin Ben Eliezer said that defeating Hamas is possible if the King of Jordan did, and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) will be able to do the same.

- Police for Arafat, the weapons for Hamas

Peres echoed Ben Eliezer, pointing out an "explicit commitment with the signing of the Declaration of Principles, according to which [PLO leader Yasser] Arafat will announce the cessation of terrorism."

He said, "I think so too, so give him weapons and the police. Look at the absurd situation we're in: You take the police from the PLO while leaving weapons with Hamas... Let's imagine that Asaf Yalim [head of Hamas] disappears; who will we talk to? Who are we going to negotiate with?"

Peres then asserts that the evacuation of settlements must be avoided.

"It is agreed that the settlements will remain as they are, even in the Gaza Strip (...) no settlement will be destroyed," he said.

At this moment, Army Chief of Staff Barak intervenes in the conversation: "From the first reading of the agreements in principle, I see very serious problems in the implementation of the security component, both in the Gaza and Jericho phase and in the more distant phase."

Barak continued, "In the text, the goodwill and effectiveness of the Palestinian police are merely hypotheses (...) As regards the [internal security agency] that the Palestinians will establish, the agreements envisage minimal cooperation with it."

He indicated that the agreements also foresee that "extremist elements" among the Palestinians will try to torpedo the deal.

Rabin concluded the meeting by saying: "The problems will be hard, and I must say, any form of autonomy will be more difficult than today. Because today, you have total control, while you have a partnership when there's autonomy. The test will be the partnership. I don't suggest covering this up."

He added that it was necessary to establish a partnership with the Palestinians, while it is uncertain how they will act in control.

Peres signed the Oslo Accords two weeks after this session with the current Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on September 13, 1993, in the White House garden, in the presence of Rabin and Arafat, and under the auspices of US President Bill Clinton, who pushed both of them to the famous historic handshake.



Long Waits for Canadian Visas Leave Gazans in Limbo

Reem Alyazouri and her husband, Ashraf Alyazouri, who escaped Gaza and reached Toronto, pose for a photograph in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 30, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
Reem Alyazouri and her husband, Ashraf Alyazouri, who escaped Gaza and reached Toronto, pose for a photograph in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 30, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
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Long Waits for Canadian Visas Leave Gazans in Limbo

Reem Alyazouri and her husband, Ashraf Alyazouri, who escaped Gaza and reached Toronto, pose for a photograph in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 30, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
Reem Alyazouri and her husband, Ashraf Alyazouri, who escaped Gaza and reached Toronto, pose for a photograph in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 30, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio

Reem Alyazouri's escape from a bombarded Gaza City through Egypt ended in Toronto on Sept. 4.
But as she and her family wrestle with applications for work permits and health insurance, her mother and father remain stuck in Cairo waiting for Canadian visas after fleeing Israel's war in the Palestinian enclave of Gaza seven months ago, Reuters said.
"My mind is busy with my parents," she said. "I feel guilty, believe me. When I came here and I left them behind they told us, 'Go and start your life. ... Don't worry about us.'"
The family is trying to come to Canada through a temporary residence program for Gazans with relatives here. Alyazouri's brother Hani Abushomar, a Canadian citizen, applied for six of his family members to join him in Canada hours after the program was launched in January.
Nine months and a harrowing exit from Gaza later, his mother and father remain stranded in Cairo. They completed the last major step of the visa application process - submitting biometric information - six months ago.
They are among thousands of Palestinians waiting for visas from Canada, a country that prides itself on welcoming people from around the world.
Canada said in May it would bring in up to 5,000 Gazans - expanding on a pledge in December to take in 1,000 from the Palestinian enclave. Months later, just over 300 have arrived, with 698 applications approved out of over 4,200 submitted.
Reuters spoke with multiple applicants who said they have been waiting for months since submitting biometric information, dashing their hopes of a swift reunion with relatives in Canada.
Canada has made no promises on how long it would take to process visas for Gazans fleeing the conflict and says it has little control over who is able to leave the enclave.
A cross-border attack by Hamas militants on Oct. 7 last year, in which Israel says 1,200 people were killed and over 250 taken hostage, ignited the war that has flattened most of Gaza, displacing most of its 2.3 million people and killing more than 41,800 people, according to Gaza health authorities.
Canada's focus "is on keeping families together and bringing them to safety as quickly as possible," immigration department spokesperson Julie Lafortune wrote in an email. The primary barrier is getting out of Gaza, she added.
Application processing times vary "based on the details and complexity of each file, and many factors are outside of the IRCC's control," Lafortune said, referring to the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada department.
The immigration department would not say how many applicants have submitted biometric information and are waiting in Egypt.
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
Immigration lawyers say the wait for Gazans is longer than those faced by other groups fleeing conflict or disaster, and that the small numbers approved contrast with hundreds of thousands of visas granted to Ukrainians under a similar program offering temporary status.
One Canadian immigration expert said some of the visa requirements for Gazans - such as having to provide employment information dating back to when they were 16 - are unusual.
"Canada has a lot of experience in designing temporary, ad hoc programs and this one has an inordinate amount of barriers and hurdles for people to meet," said University of Ottawa law professor Jamie Chai Yun Liew, who focuses on immigration.
Liew said the Gaza program is moving slower than other Canadian temporary immigration programs, including those for Ukranians and survivors of the 2023 earthquake in Syria and Türkiye.
As of April, Canada had approved nearly 963,000 applications under the Canada-Ukraine authorization for emergency travel since March 2022. So far nearly 300,000 people have arrived in Canada under that program.
Australia has granted about 3,000 visitor visas to people from Gaza since October 2023 and about 1,300 have arrived in the country, said Graham Thom, advocacy coordinator with the Refugee Council of Australia, a research and advocacy group.
'EVERYTHING IS UNCERTAIN'
Gazans who have managed to get to Egypt live in limbo, surviving off savings or donations, without access to government services, said immigration lawyer Debbie Rachlis, adding she represents dozens in that position. Many are survivors of trauma.
They beat the odds just by getting that far, and for most, the escape came at great personal risk. The Gaza City neighborhood where Alyazouri and Abushomar's family lived has been "erased," he said. They were forced to flee from their home multiple times. Alyazouri's daughter was injured.
"Something in my heart is broken," Alyazouri said.
The Canadian government said it continues to put forward the names of applicants to local Israeli officials, "but does not ultimately decide who can exit Gaza."
"Israel has agreed to Canada's request for the exit of extended family members in Gaza as part of their expanding humanitarian efforts. However, at present, the Rafah border crossing is closed,” Lafortune wrote, referring to the main entry point between Gaza and Egypt.
Abushomar has been waiting with his mother and father for visas in Egypt, where people in their position lack papers to work, access health care or open a bank account. He says he will eventually have to return to Canada to work and worries for his parents, especially his mother, who has dementia and joint problems.
For now, Abushomar says, "Everything is uncertain."