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Egypt's Aboul Gheit
Photo: Reuters

Egypt backs Palestinian position on settlements

As US special envoy meets with Egyptian president, Cairo's foreign minister says current conditions' not favorable for peace talks to continue

Egypt backed the Palestinians' refusal to negotiate with Israel as long as it continues to build West Bank settlements, even as officials urged Sunday for continued diplomacy to salvage the month-old talks.

 

Washington's Mideast envoy met with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to discuss the impasse ahead of an Arab League meeting this week at which the Palestinians are expected to deliver a final decision on whether to continue with talks following Israel's decision a week ago to allow a curb on settlement building to expire.

 

George Mitchell then traveled to Jordan where he is expected to meet with King Abdullah II.

 

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas says there is no point negotiating as long as settlements are eating up the land the Palestinians want for a future state. On Saturday, senior Palestinian officials backed Abbas's refusal and said they are now considering alternatives to the direct negotiations if Israel doesn't budge.

 

Following Mitchell's meeting with Mubarak, Egypt's foreign minister said the Palestinian position is understandable.

 

"We understand the Palestinian position which calls for setting the appropriate environment and circumstances for negotiations to take place and continue," Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said. "The current conditions are not favorable."

 

Aboul Gheit said the focus now should be on continued US and international efforts to pressure Israel into agreeing to extending the settlement moratorium.

 

Difficulties and obstacles

The first direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in two years were launched last month in Washington. The two sides then met face-to-face in Egypt and Jerusalem but disagreements over the settlement building curb derailed the negotiations, which are to address the borders of a future Palestinian state, the political status of Jerusalem and the fate of Palestinian refugees.

 

Now, Mitchell is back to speaking separately with all the parties consulting regional players to save the floundering process.

 

"We knew when we began these efforts that there will be a lot of difficulties and obstacles," Mitchell said after meeting Mubarak. "Despite the differences, both the government of Israel and the Palestinian authority asked us to continue these discussions and efforts.

 

"They both want to continue those negotiations," he added.

 

However, Saturday's unanimous decision by dozens of senior members of the Palestine Liberation Organization and Abbas' Fatah movement makes compromise increasingly unlikely.

 

"There will be no negotiations as long as settlement building continues," senior Abbas aide Nabil Abu Rdeneh said after the three-hour meeting at Abbas' headquarters.

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he is serious about reaching a deal within a year and has accused the Palestinians of wasting precious time over secondary issues.

 

 


פרסום ראשון: 10.03.10, 14:10
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