UK's Prince William starts politically delicate Middle East trip

Prince William arrived in Jordan on Sunday, and on Monday evening he will head off for Jerusalem.

Britain's Prince William leaves the plane as he arrives in Amman, Jordan, on June 24, 2018.
Reuters

Britain's Prince William leaves the plane as he arrives in Amman, Jordan, on June 24, 2018.

Britain's Prince William on Sunday kicked off a politically delicate five-day tour of Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian territories, preparing to meet with young people, refugees and national leaders in a tumultuous region that Britain had controlled between the two world wars.

Though billed as non-political, it's a high-profile foreign visit for the 36-year-old William, second in line to the British throne.

On Sunday, he was welcomed in Jordan by 23-year-old Crown Prince Hussein, a member of the Hashemite dynasty Britain helped install in then-Transjordan almost a century ago. William was greeted by an honour guard after his plane landed at a small airport on the outskirts of the capital of Amman.

In two days in the kingdom, he will visit a technology outreach group for young Jordanians, tour a vocational training college with links to Britain's Middlesex University and meet Syrian refugee children.

On Monday evening, the prince leaves for Jerusalem for the first-ever official visit by a member of the royal family to Israel and Palestine.

He'll meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah at a time of widening rifts between the two sides.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict typically looms large, even during largely ceremonious visits, and William will have to maneuver carefully to avoid missteps.

Last week, an Israeli Cabinet minister complained about the royal itinerary's reference to Jerusalem as part of the "Occupied Palestinian Territories," calling it a distortion of reality.

Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in a war in 1967 and annexed it in a move not internationally recognised. Israel considers the eastern sector, home to sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, as an inseparable part of its capital. Palestinians seek east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state they hope will also include the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Hanan Ashrawi, a senior official of the Palestine Liberation Organization, said she welcomes William's visit to the West Bank as a chance to see Palestinian reality under Israeli occupation first hand. "This visit is the first of its kind and represents an opportunity to enhance relations between Prince William and the Palestinian people on all the levels," she said.

William is visiting a region where three decades of British rule between the two world wars helped establish some of the fault lines of today's Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Britain's withdrawal from the region after World War II led to the eventual establishment of Israel and Jordan.

Jordan's ruling Hashemite dynasty has strong ties to Britain.

The second marriage of the late King Hussein was to a British citizen, Antoinette Gardiner, who took the title Princess Muna and is the mother of the current monarch, King Abdullah II. Hussein, Abdullah and Crown Prince Hussein all attended Sandhurst, the British military academy, as did William.

William's wife, the former Kate Middleton, spent two years in Jordan as a toddler when her father moved the family there during a work assignment. A Middleton family photo shows Kate, her younger sister Pippa and her father in the ruins of Jerash, the ancient Roman city William will visit on Monday.

After Sunday's airport arrival ceremony, the first stop for the prince is FabLab, an organisation that offers young people a chance to explore technology and is backed by the Crown Prince Foundation. On Sunday evening, William is delivering a speech during a reception hosted by the British Embassy in Amman.

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