Ahead of Abbas' visit to India next week, Dr Majdi Khaldi, a senior Palestinian official, described India's relations with Palestine as "historic" and "steady" and asserted that the Palestinians want to strengthen their ties with India and seek support for their "struggle".
"India has the right to have relations with Israel and any other country but what we care about is that it should not be at the expense of its relations with Palestine and its principled stand supporting the Palestinian cause that we should have our state within the 1967 borders with east Jerusalem as its capital," Khaldi, a senior diplomatic adviser of Abbas, told PTI in an interview.
"It is up to the Indian Prime Minister to decide when and where to visit. It is his decision. The President (Abbas) was invited by the Prime Minister (Modi) to visit India which he is doing," the aide to the Palestinian president said.
Several MoUs will be signed between India and Palestine during Abbas' visit to New Delhi from May 14 to 17 with special emphasis on cooperation in the fields of health, agriculture, sports and youth affairs, the official said.
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"We are interested in strengthening our relations with India and to continue getting its political support for our cause and this is the most important thing for us, irrespective of India's relations with Israel. The most important thing is that it should not be at the expense of our relations, the good relations between India and Palestine," he asserted.
"Palestine and India have historic relations that do not stand only on bilateral visits. We have excellent relations with all parties, no matter who governs India. The reason is the deep relations between the two people and also the establishment in the two countries," Khaldi said.
Despite concerns raised in the past over India's vote at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), which some in the Israeli media interpreted as a change in India's thinking under the new government, the Palestinian Authority seems to have accepted New Delhi's position.
Appreciating India's assistance in capacity building in Palestine and support to the local population through several projects, the Palestinian official said that the relations between the two sides was "going in a new direction".
Palestinians now seek New Delhi's help in acquiring new technologies, he said.
"We have developed bilateral committees lately so that we can renew most of the agreements to strengthen the relations between our two countries and some of these are going to improve economic exchange between Palestine and India", the official said.
"We are going to expand cooperation between the businessmen and the two governments. This project is going to trigger much wider relations between the two nations," he asserted.
Abbas will be visiting India following his recent meetings in Cairo, Amman and with US President Donald Trump in Washington. He is likely to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow from where he would fly out to New Delhi.
"He (Trump) is convinced that he can do something different, something important to solve this conflict and can help reach an ultimate deal and we are going to be fully cooperative," he said.
The Palestinian president will also brief the Indian political leadership on different regional developments, especially the crisis in Syria, Yemen, Libya and certain other parts of the region.