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Obituaries

Former US president Jimmy Carter, peace broker and Israel critic, dies at 100

Carter was instrumental in forging peace between Egypt and Israel, but was a critic of the Jewish state in his later years

December 30, 2024 12:10
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WASHINGTON DC, USA: (FILE PHOTO) The triple handshake between Egyptian President Anwar Sadat (L), US President Jimmy Carter (C) and Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin seals the signing of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treat March 26, 1979 on the White House lawn in Washington DC. Three years later, Jewish settlers resisted evacuation from their Sinai Desert settlements and now, 22 years after that, another generation of settlers in the Gaza Strip are threatening a last stand against forced removal should ruling Prime Minister Ariel Sharon go through with his plan to withdraw from the Gaza Strip. (Photo by Tel Or Beni/GPO/Getty Images)

ByAndrew Bernard, Jewish News Syndicate

6 min read

Former US President Jimmy Carter has died “peacefully” at his home in the US state of Georgia surrounded by family on Sunday at the age of 100, the Carter centre announced.

He leaves behind a legacy as a lifelong humanitarian, for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002, and a one-term presidency that was mired in domestic challenges and a mixed foreign policy.

Carter’s term in office from 1977 to 1981 was defined by what he described in a 1979 speech as a “crisis of confidence” and what others termed “malaise”: high unemployment, double-digit inflation and slow economic growth.

In foreign policy, he presided over some of the most significant developments of the Cold War, and many of his decisions remain controversial. In 1977, Carter signed the Panama Canal Treaty, which handed over control of the US Panama Canal Zone to the Panamanians in 1979 and the canal itself to them in 1999.