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Prince William pays first official British royal visit to occupied West Bank

By Reuters - Jun 28,2018 - Last updated at Jun 28,2018

Britain's Prince William (centre) walks through Al Jalazoun refugee camp near the West bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday (AFP photo)

JALAZONE CAMP, West Bank — Prince William paid the first official British royal visit to the Palestinian Territories on Wednesday, touring a refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and voicing hope for peace in a meeting with the Palestinian president.

William, second in line to the throne, received a red-carpet welcome to the Muqata, the Palestinian government headquarters in the city of Ramallah, that included an honour guard and band.

"I'm very glad our two countries work so closely together and have had success stories with education and relief work in the past, so, long may that continue," William told President Mahmoud Abbas.

"My sentiments are the same as yours in hoping that there is a lasting peace in the region," the prince said.

William then visited Jalazoune refugee camp and its health clinic and a school, administered by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency.

A sign banning weapons — a picture of a Kalashnikov assault rifle with red line through it — was on the door of the health centre, which the prince toured before visiting the school and chatting with pupils.

Armed Palestinian security men stood on rooftops in the camp, reached via an unpaved road and bordering a large illegal Jewish settlement. More than 9,000 people live in the crowded camp of cinderblock and concrete buildings.

On Tuesday, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin publicly asked the prince to bring Abbas "a message of peace" and tell him it is time to find a way to "build confidence" between Israel and the Palestinians.

Rivlin's position is largely ceremonial and in remarks released to the media after his own meeting with William earlier that day Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made no such request.

Peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians collapsed in 2014 and the divide between the two sides has widened in the years since amid bouts of violence. 

The West Bank, where Palestinians have limited self-rule, has been largely quiet in recent months, in contrast to protests along Israel's border fence with Gaza, an enclave ruled by Abbas's main Palestinian rival, the Hamas Islamist group.

Israeli occupation forces have killed at least 130 Palestinians during mass demonstrations along the border since March 30.

"The Palestinian side is committed to the peace process with the Israelis, so both states could live peacefully together within the borders of 1967," Abbas said in his public remarks at his meeting with William.

Palestinians want East Jerusalem, captured by Israel along with the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the 1967 Middle East war, as the capital of an independent state they seek to establish in the two territories.

In 2005 Israel pulled troops and settlers out of Gaza, but maintains tight control of the territory's land and sea borders, citing security concerns. This has deepened hardship in Gaza, whose economy, international experts say, is in a state of collapse.

Until now it had been British policy not to make an official royal visit to Israel and the occupied territories until the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was resolved. 

"It's not a time when he can come and celebrate success in the Middle East peace process or anything of that sort, but it is a time when we can show our interest in the region," Philip Hall, Britain's consul general in Jerusalem, told Reuters before William flew to the Middle East.

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