Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad Al-Maliki said today that his country is ready for the success of the Chinese peace initiative, and last week Beijing launched an initiative consisting of 5 items to achieve security and stability in the Middle East.

This statement came during his meeting today in Ramallah with Chinese Ambassador to Palestine Guo Wei, who said that the initiative put forward by his country "constitutes an integrated plan and provides an effective and realistic framework for the international community to push towards achieving security and stability in the entire region, based on the achievement of a just and comprehensive peace of the issue." Palestinian ".

The Chinese ambassador added that the initiative offers detailed ideas on advancing the peace process in the Middle East and commitment to the two-state solution.

The Chinese initiative in the Middle East includes 5 points:

Advocating for mutual respect, commitment to fairness and justice.


- Solving the Palestinian issue and achieving the two-state solution represents the most important test of justice and equity in the Middle East, while supporting the holding of a credible international conference in case conditions ripen.


Achieve non-proliferation of nuclear weapons.


Joint action to achieve collective security.


- To accelerate the pace of development and cooperation.

And Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in a television interview that his country intends to invite Palestinian and Israeli figures to hold talks in Beijing, without further details.

The Palestinians reject the exclusive US sponsorship of the political settlement process in the Middle East, due to its bias towards Israel, and they demand international sponsorship and the holding of an international peace conference, which Israel strongly rejects.

Negotiations to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict between the Palestinians and Tel Aviv have been stalled since April 2014, due to the latter's refusal to release old detainees, to stop settlement activity, and to accept the pre-1967 borders as a basis for the two-state solution.