RNA - The group, called Yesha Council, announced that it is invited to Trump’s inauguration but the council's foreign envoy, Oded Revi, did not confirm whether representatives would attend, Middle East Eye reported.
The Yesha Council represents the settlements in Occupied Palestinian Territories, which are considered illegal under international law, and local or the overseas lobbies.
The council was formerly headed by Naftali Bennet, now leader of the right-wing Jewish Home party and Israel’s education minister.
Trump’s transition team did not comment on the report and has not confirmed whether any groups representing Palestinians or Arab-Israelis had also been invited to the inauguration, reported the Independent.
According to the paper, the council raised $90 million in private donations for the event.
The news comes after secret recordings of an AIPAC event in the British capital suggested that the Israeli embassy in London is working with the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee to set up pro-Israel groups and cultivate an American-style lobbying culture in the UK.
In covertly filmed footage, a senior political officer at the embassy described how he had set up an organization called the City Friends of Israel with AIPAC's support, and later brought AIPAC officials over from the US to address the group.
Shai Masot, the now-former embassy official at the center of revelations about Israeli influence inside British politics, also told an Al Jazeera undercover reporter how he had arranged a meeting between Conservative and Labor party delegates and AIPAC's head of strategy in Washington in order that he could give them “some ideas for Britain”.
Student activists in the UK also revealed how they had received funding from AIPAC to set up groups tasked with countering pro-Palestinian sentiment and undermining the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign on university campuses.
AIPAC is considered one of the most effective lobbying organisations in American politics, with a member of its delegation telling his audience in London that it had built relationships with all 535 members of Congress.
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