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AFP
Ramallah
The Palestinian government attacked comments on Wednesday by the US ambassador to Israel blaming it for the failure of peace efforts, after an Israeli settler was killed in the occupied West Bank.
In the latest tensions between them, the Palestinian foreign ministry accused US ambassador David Friedman of a"prejudiced and selective attitude" towards the conflict.
It comes a month after US President Donald Trump recognised Jerusalem as Israel's capital, angering the Palestinians.
"An Israeli father of six was killed last night in cold blood by Palestinian terrorists," Friedman said on Twitter Wednesday after a 35-year-old was killed near an Israeli settlement in the West Bank.
"Hamas praises the killers and PA (Palestinian Authority) laws will provide them financial rewards. Look no further to why there is no peace."
Friedman, a supporter of West Bank settlements, was referring to payments to the families of imprisoned Palestinians, including those who have carried out attacks against Israelis, and to those killed while carrying out attacks.
Hamas, a Palestinian Islamist group, praised the attack.
The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that Friedman's comments reflected his"prejudiced and selective attitude towards the occupation, settlement construction, and the Palestinian just and legitimate national rights."
It pointed to Friedman's silence over what Palestinians say was the killing by Israeli forces of a disabled Palestinian man during recent protests and clashes on the Gaza border and other killings as evidence of his bias.
"Friedman's remarks and positions further complicated the road towards the peace process and the resumption of negotiations between the Israeli and Palestinian sides, specifically after President Donald Trump's declaration on Jerusalem," the statement added.
Trump's December 6 announcement that he would move the US embassy from Israel's commercial capital to Jerusalem enraged the Palestinians.
They said they will no longer engage with the Trump administration's push for fresh peace talks.