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Palestinian Authority Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr. Varsen Aghabekian (R) and translator Israa Da’as (L) speak to the press at the Foreign Ministry in Ramallah, on the West Bank, Aug. 13, 2025
(Photo: Felice Friedson/The Media Line)
“We continue our diplomatic and political efforts, holding dialogues and discussions with decision-making centers in various countries and components of the international community to stop genocide, displacement and annexation, and to push the world to fulfill its responsibilities in implementing United Nations resolutions on the Palestinian issue,” she told reporters.
The task force has appointed ambassadors to lobby governments to adopt the New York Declaration and identify ways for states to support its implementation financially or otherwise. Aghabekian emphasized that any future Palestinian state would be demilitarized. “If we have peace with our neighbors, that is something we recognize,” she said. “Soft weapons to keep peace and security throughout would be there, but not anything of strong weaponry used in forging wars and the like.”
She stressed the need to counter Israeli narratives about “the day after” the war, ensure aid reaches residents and launch a political process to resolve the conflict “by official political means.” Asked about “helicoptering” a government into Gaza, she said any transition would be under the auspices of the Arab and Islamic worlds.
While statehood remains the PA’s goal, Aghabekian said an immediate ceasefire is essential to ease suffering in Gaza and to secure the release of about 50 Israeli hostages—both dead and alive—held by Hamas. “Hamas is to have no role in governance and must hand over its weapons to the Palestinian security forces; these weapons are not to be part of governance,” she said.
“Palestine is not to be an armed state. There must be a full Israeli military withdrawal from Gaza and we will work with international partners for early recovery and reconstruction, preparation for Palestinian elections and an end to unilateral steps that violate international law, including settlement building, annexation, settler violence and damage to Palestinian and Christian holy sites.”
There has been no direct contact with the Trump administration, she said, though the PA is working “to get our voice to President Trump and the people around Trump making decisions in the U.S.” She added, “President Trump wants to be nominated for a peace prize; we hope he does, hopefully by solving our peace problem.”
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) says around 200 journalists and media workers have been killed in the war since October 7, 2023—more than double the number killed during World War II, the Vietnam War or the war in Ukraine, Aghabekian claimed.
But unlike casualty figures from earlier wars, the roughly 200 journalists reported killed in the Israel-Hamas conflict did not all die while on assignment or directly because of their press duties. CPJ says 26 were directly targeted and killed as journalists by Israeli forces, while another 20 deaths under investigation may also involve targeting. Many others were killed in broader military strikes, and not necessarily while actively reporting.
“For some reason, the media is ignoring information presented by us because Al-Sharif has said he is not a terrorist. ‘Trust me, I am not a terrorist’ apparently works if you are against Israel. Will the world honestly check before reporting? Will there be criticism of Hamas’ exploitation of the press? Will anyone criticize Al Jazeera for employing terrorists?”
Aghabekian rejected the allegation. “Everyone believes what Israel says,” she said. “For Israel, everyone in Gaza is a terrorist. Al-Sharif is not an exception.”