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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. |  
       
      
        
 G-8 Statement Succumbs to Israeli-Led Canadian 
		Pressure,
 Drops Reference to the 1967 Borders for a Palestinian 
		State
 
 Israeli Pressure Leads To Zionist Support Statement By G8 
		Ministers Sunday May 29, 2011 09:11 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News After a call from Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Canadian 
		Premier Stephen Harper agreed to draft a statement for all G8 ministers 
		to sign that expressed support for Zionist aspirations by removing any 
		reference to the 1967 borders.
 The Group of 8, or G8, meeting was 
		held Thursday and Friday in France, and included representatives from 
		France, Britain, Russia, the US, Italy, Germany, Japan and Canada. Going 
		into the meeting, all but one (Canada) supported the inclusion of a 
		sentence supporting a return to the 1967 borders, with mutually agreed 
		upon land swaps, as a basis for negotiations between the Israelis and 
		Palestinians.
 
 But with Canada's refusal to accept the Final 
		Declaration of the Summit unless that sentence was removed, the other 
		nations succumbed to the pressure and removed the reference to 1967 
		borders. Instead, the Declaration, titled “G8 Declaration: Renewed 
		Commitment for Freedom and Democracy”, included criticism of the 
		Palestinian plan to declare statehood in September at the United 
		Nations.
 
 It called for a return to the peace process, but did not 
		mention the ongoing violations of past signed agreements by Israeli 
		authorities. It also did not mention the core demands of the Palestinian 
		people and their representatives: the return of Palestinian refugees, 
		the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital 
		and the release of Palestinian political prisoners.
 
 The final 
		statement by the G8 ministers also failed to specify the terms on which 
		the 'negotiations' would be based, saying only, “The framework for these 
		negotiations is well known.”
 
 According to the Israeli daily 
		Ha'aretz, “The Foreign Ministry instructed its envoys in the various 
		capitals to ask that the G-8's concluding statement emphasize three 
		things: that a Palestinian state will arise only through direct 
		negotiations, not through a unilateral move in the United Nations; 
		opposition to Hamas-Fat'h reconciliation as long as Hamas rejects the 
		Quartet's conditions; and opposition to a mention of the issue of 1967 
		borders and exchanges of territory.”
 
 Ha'aretz also quoted Israeli 
		Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who lives in an illegal settlement 
		in the West Bank, in a statement to his counterpart in Canada, thanking 
		him for Canada's role in pushing through the statement that Isrel 
		wanted, saying, “Canada is a true friend of Israel and with a realistic 
		and proper view of things, it understands that the 1967 borders do not 
		conform to Israel's security needs and with the current demographic 
		reality.”
 
 Lieberman frequently refers to the Palestinian 
		population as a “demographic threat”, and has openly called for the 
		transfer of the one million Palestinians with Israeli citizenship to 
		some place outside of Israel, as their presence, and their growth due to 
		higher birth rates, threatens the “Jewish character” of the state of 
		Israel.
 
 Since its creation in 1948 on the land of historic 
		Palestine, Israel has never defined its borders, and has continually 
		expanded onto Palestinian land. The state of Israel is currently 
		constructing a wall throughout the West Bank that would, by the time it 
		is completed, leave the Palestinians with 13% of their original land in 
		three separate reservations completely surrounded by Israel, with no 
		access to Jerusalem or any other country.
 
 For the full text of 
		the Declaration, see the link below.
 
 
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