Peace Means Ending Israeli Occupation and 
		establishing a Palestinian State, Says Abbas in Argentina
      
		
		Abbas: “Palestinians Will Not Start A New Intifada”
		Monday November 23, 2009 23:16 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies
		
		
		Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, stated Monday that the 
		Palestinians will not start a new Intifada despite the fact that they 
		are disappointed by the stalled the peace process, sponsored by the 
		United States. 
Speaking to reporters in Argentina, Abbas said 
		that the Palestinians are not thinking about a new Intifada, but instead 
		they are thinking about peace and negotiations, especially after all of 
		the suffering, shelling and displacement. 
He also slammed 
		Israel's construction of the Annexation Wall and settlements, and 
		Israel’s policies that prevent the Palestinians, Muslims and Christians, 
		from reaching their holy sites in Jerusalem. 
Abbas added that 
		the isolation of Jerusalem, the Wall and the settlements will prevent 
		the establishment of a Palestinian state, an issue which would 
		jeopardize the whole peace process. 
The Palestinian President 
		further stated that the international community must be able to tell 
		Israel that it is wrong, and that it should halt comply with the 
		international resolutions and initiatives, especially with the Road Map 
		Peace Plan and all related Security council Resolutions. 
“Peace 
		and occupation cannot coexist”, Abbas said, “Peace with 
		settlements is impossible, we seek comprehensive peace”. 
He also 
		thanked Argentina for its continued aid to the Palestinians, and for 
		voting for the Goldstone report at the Human Rights Council. 
		“The foundations of peace are known and internationally approved”, Abbas 
		said, “Peace means ending the occupation of 1967, 
		and establishing a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital. 
		This will lead 47 Arab (and Muslim) countries to fully recognize 
		Israel”.
		In Argentina, Abbas overshadowed by Ahmadinejad 
		Published yesterday (updated) 23/11/2009 20:38 
		Bethlehem – Ma’an/Agencies – 
		President Mahmoud Abbas arrived in Argentina for talks on the now 
		comatose Middle East peace process on Sunday, on a visit overshadowed by 
		Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahadinejad’s visit to neighboring Brazil.
		Abbas was to meet with his argentine counterpart Cristina Kirchner on 
		Monday. Last week Kirchner told visiting Israeli President Peres her 
		government favors the creation of a Palestinian state.
		Palestinian-Israeli peace talks were broken off in December 2008 when 
		Israel launched a three-week war on the Gaza Strip that ultimately left 
		more than 1,400 Palestinians dead. Abbas recently rejected an Israeli 
		offer to resume talks on the grounds that Israel must halt the expansion 
		of settlements on land taken from Palestinians.
During his 
		meeting with Kirchner, Abbas praised Argentina for voting in support of 
		a UN-mandated investigation into the war. “We thank Argentina for their 
		continuous supports and for their voting for the Goldstone report,” he 
		said.
He also urged Argentina to pressure Israel to halt the 
		construction of West Bank settlements: “We need everyone who can to say 
		to the Israeli authority that they are mistaken, that they are doing 
		wrong to Palestinians and that they should revise their policy and stop 
		settlement activity.”
"They [Israel] should implement the 
		international decisions, especially the Road Map, and then we can 
		continue final status negotiations, because there is no peace with 
		occupation and settlements."
"To achieve peace we need to end the 
		occupation that happened in the 1967, and the establishment of the 
		Palestinian State and Jerusalem its capital," he added.
Iranian 
		connection
While in Brazil last week, Abbas asked President Luiz 
		Inacio Lula da Silva to persuade Iran to cease support for his main 
		Palestinian rival, the Hamas movement, which won parliamentary elections 
		in 2006.
"Iran supports Hamas with money. Hamas' decisions are in 
		the hands of Tehran," Abbas said on Friday in an interview with the 
		Brazilian daily Folha de Sao Paulo. 
"I hope [Lula] can tell [Ahmadinejad] 
		a few things about everything that is happening in the Middle East. I 
		think the president will," Abbas was quoted as saying.
Israel’s 
		archenemy, Iran is thought to be a key backer of Hamas. As a key Middle 
		East state, Ahmadinejad is in Brazil seeking support amid growing 
		isolation resulting from the country’s standoff with the west over its 
		atomic energy program.
While Abbas continued his overseas tour to 
		salvage, Iran’s ally Hamas was reportedly poised to conclude a prisoner 
		exchange with Israel that would involve the release of more than 1,000 
		Palestinians from Israeli prisons. If an exchange takes place it would 
		amount to a massive strategic victory for Hamas.
’Argentina backs 
		Palestine’
Argentina’s foreign ministry said Abbas visit “will 
		offer the opportunity of exchanging the countries point of views on 
		regards the Middle East regional situation, as well the negotiations 
		carried out so far by both Palestinians and Israelis, and the 
		possibility of Argentina’s cooperation for the region." 
In the 
		same communiqué, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana said, "Argentina has 
		always supported the peace-making processes intended to resolve the 
		Middle East conflict, and to guarantee the inalienable right of the 
		people of Palestine to constitute an independent state," according to 
		the Buenos Aires Herald.
On Tuesday, Abbas is expected to meet 
		with Argentina's top lawmakers at the Congress, visit the Islamic Center 
		and give a speech at the Argentine Council of International Relations.
		
Abbas is accompanied on his two-day visit to Argentina by foreign 
		minister Riad Al-Maliki and Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat.