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Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Talks With Israelis Will End If Settlement Freeze
Not Extended, Says President Abbas
Tuesday September 07, 2010 08:33 by George Rishmawi - IMEMC &
Agencies
The end of September might be the end of peace talks, if Israel
refuses to extend the settlement freeze, the Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas told the local daily newspaper Al-Ayyam.
"This was
made clear to President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton and to the
Israeli Prime Minister, and I told him 'You have to know that if you
don’t continue with the settlement freeze, we will leave these
negotiations'," Abbas was quoted as saying.
This followed
statements by the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his
Minister of Defence Ehud Barak, in which they both clearly indicated
that Israel will not renew the settlement freeze.
"There is now a
settlement freeze in place, and there is a fear that this freeze will be
canceled now that we have resumed talks; there is a fear that
settlements will resume construction everywhere. We say that if the
settlement freeze is continued, then we will continue the negotiations,
but if the freeze expires, then no one can force us to continue the
talks."
On the other hand, local observers maintain that despite
Israel's declaration of a settlement freeze, there was no real freeze.
During the claimed 10-month freeze, Israeli settlement watchdog 'Peace
Now' reported 492 violations of the freeze.
Based in part on
aerial photographs, the group said construction had begun on at least
600 housing units in 60 different settlements.
These violations
do not include settlement activities in East Jerusalem as the freeze did
not include East Jerusalem.
When negotiations teams meet again
alongside their US mediators, Abbas explained, the issues of borders and
security will be first on the table, according to a report by Al-Ayyam
paper. The Palestinian president suggested a third party presence on the
ground in order to assure security for the Israelis.
"I told them
that if they want assurances for their security we would accept a third
party presence for a limited period of time, like what happened in the
Sinai, we don't mind having a foreign presence on the condition that it
is not Israeli, be they Israeli Christians, Muslims or Druze; Israeli
forces mean a continued occupation and this we are against."
On
the border issue, Al-Ayyam reported that Abbas gave the border issue
priority over security, saying that borders come first.
Abbas
added that his approach to borders would begin with the 1967 lines and
demarcating a Palestinian state from there. "Once we have the borders
set, we can find a solution for Jerusalem, the water and the
settlements," he said, adding that the issue of refugees would be
tackled in the next round.
However Abbas warned that he is
willing to resign if asked to give up the rights of Palestinian
refugees.
"I will not give up on any of the constants and if they
ask me to make concessions on the right of refugees or the 1967 borders,
I will leave. I will not accept it on myself to sign off on one single
concession," he concluded.
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