US
President Donald Trump's advisor and son-in-law Jared Kushner met with Jordan's
King Abdullah II in Amman on Wednesday for talks on a controversial US plan for
Israeli-Palestinian peace.
The
two discussed "efforts to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,"
the royal court said in a statement, adding that Kushner was "visiting
Jordan on a tour that includes a number of countries in the region."
The
initiative's economic aspects were launched in June by Kushner during a
conference in Bahrain, dangling the prospect of $50 billion of investment into
a stagnant Palestinian economy.
During
their meeting, King Abdullah stressed "the need to achieve a just and
lasting peace to ensure the establishment of an independent Palestinian
state... with east Jerusalem as its capital, living in peace and security
alongside Israel," the court said.
He
said any peace plan should be based on the internationally backed
"two-state solution" and in accordance with the 2002 Arab Peace
Initiative.
The
initiative called on Israel to withdraw from all land it occupied in 1967, in
exchange for normalization between all Arab states and Israel.
Kushner
was accompanied by Trump's Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt, the royal court
said.
An
official in Trump's administration said earlier this month that Kushner would
return to the Middle East to further push the plan, but did not give details of
his expected itinerary.
On
previous trips Kushner has visited Israel as well as Saudi Arabia and Jordan.
Jordan,
one of only two Arab countries to have a peace treaty with Israel, is home to
9.5 million people – more than half of them of Palestinian origin.
Two
thirds are Jordanian citizens, while the others are considered refugees who
many Jordanians fear will be settled permanently and given citizenship if the
Kushner plan goes through.
More
than two million Palestinians in Jordan are UN-registered refugees.