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Palestinians say enough talks about talks
by Staff Writers
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Jan 25, 2012

Ban to visit Israel, Palestinian territories next week
United Nations (AFP) Jan 25, 2012 - UN leader Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday that he will visit Israel and the Palestinians territories next week to reinforce efforts to revive the deadlocked peace process.

Ban said he would also go to Jordan which has been hosting informal talks between the rival sides in the Middle East conflict.

The UN secretary general did not give details of his tour, but he is expected to arrive in Amman on Monday after attending the African Union summit in Addis Ababa at the weekend.

"My visit comes at an important moment," Ban told a press conference. "I will be there to encourage both sides to engage in earnest and create a positive atmosphere for moving forward."

Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were to hold a final round of informal talks on Wednesday ahead of the expiration of a deadline set by the Middle East Quartet of diplomatic peacemakers -- the United States, United Nations, Russia, and European Union -- of a new initiative to relaunch talks.

Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas said following talks with Jordan's King Abdullah II in Amman on Wednesday that Palestinians could return to formal negotiations if Israel would agree to set out borders.

The Palestinians halted formal talks in September 2010 when Israel ended a moratorium on settlement building in the Palestinian territories.


The Palestinians ruled out any more talks about a resumption of Middle East peace negotiations Wednesday after a fifth meeting in Jordan produced "not one step" from Israel.

"Today's meeting was the last and there will be no further exploratory talks with the Israeli side," a senior Palestinian official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"We can say that all these meetings have gone nowhere because Israel has moved not one step to enable a resumption of negotiations," the official said after the meeting held under tight secrecy in Jordan.

The Jordanian hosts put a brave face on the outcome of the talks, saying they had been "frank and serious, despite the differences of position".

"The coming days will be dedicated to assessing the results in consultation with the concerned parties," Jordan's official Petra news agency quoted Foreign Minister Nasser Jawdeh as saying.

Diplomatic efforts by the so-called Quartet made up of the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States to jumpstart the moribund peace negotiations have intensified in recent days.

European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is to meet Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas on Thursday and the United Nations announced that Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is to head to the Middle East next week.

Ahead of the Jordan talks, Abbas rephrased the Palestinians' longstanding conditions for new talks.

"If we determine the borders, it is possible to return to negotiations, but the Israelis don't want to determine the borders," Abbas said in comments published by the Palestinians' official Wafa news agency.

Until now, the Palestinians have said they will agree to return to the negotiating table only if Israel agrees to freeze settlement construction and if it accepts the lines that existed before the 1967 Six-Day War as the basis for discussions on future borders.

There was no immediate Israeli response to Abbas's remarks which were made just hours before Palestinian negotiators Saeb Erakat and Mohammed Shtayeh met Israel's Yitzhak Molcho in Jordan.

The two negotiating teams have held four face-to-face meetings since January 3 to explore ways of returning to direct talks which broke down in late 2010.

But they have made little tangible progress, prompting Palestinian threats to halt the talks unless there are concrete signs of progress by Thursday.

The two sides do not even agree on that deadline, with Israel saying it considers the three-month target date set by the Quartet to have begun from the first round of exploratory talks on January 3.

The EU foreign policy chief renewed the bloc's commitment to efforts to relaunch peace talks on a visit to Gaza earlier on Wednesday.

"I am a realist about where we are but I am a passionate believer that we need to keep talks going and increase the potential of these talks to become genuine negotiations," Ashton told reporters in Gaza City.

"So we are looking to see what we can do to help, but at the end this is a discussion that needs to take place between the two sides."

Before he met Ashton late Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted he remained committed to renewed talks.

"We have been trying to make sure the talks between us and the Palestinians continue," the Israeli premier said.

"This is our design and I look forward to discussing it with you to make sure this is what happens."

burs/kir/ach

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Talks 'possible' if Israel agrees borders: Abbas
Amman (AFP) Jan 25, 2012 - The Palestinians could resume talks with Israel if the two sides first agree on borders, president Mahmud Abbas said after meeting Jordan's king, the Palestinian state news agency reported on Wednesday.

Abbas made the remarks after discussions with King Abdullah II, and ahead of a fifth round of exploratory talks between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators who are seeking ways to restart direct negotiations between the two sides.

"If we determine the borders it is possible to return to negotiations, but the Israelis don't want to determine the borders," Abbas said according to remarks carried by WAFA news agency.

The Palestinians have said it would be pointless to hold talks without a framework for discussions, and want Israel to agree to use the lines that existed before the 1967 Six-Day War as the basis for discussions on future borders.

They have also insisted in the past that they will not return to direct talks, which have been on hold since the end of September 2010, without an Israeli settlement freeze, though Abbas made no reference to that demand in his comments on Wednesday.

Abbas's talks with King Abdullah came shortly before Palestinian negotiators Saeb Erakat and Mohammed Shtayeh were to meet Israel's Yitzhak Molcho for a fifth round of "exploratory talks."

The discussions were intended to lead the parties back to talks under a timeline announced by the peacemaking Quartet on October 26, which gave both sides three months to submit proposals on territory and security.

The Palestinians say they have submitted their documents, and accuse Israel of failing to reciprocate.

But Israel says it considers the three-month period to have begun from the first round of exploratory talks on January 3, with officials reportedly saying they would present their outlines on borders and security at some point in March.

Abbas said the Palestinians had been clear about their demands on security, and that a period of evaluation would follow what he and his officials have insisted will be the final round of exploratory talks today.

"On security, we are ready for any Israeli requests on the issue of security, on the condition that not a single Israeli will be on Palestinian land," he said.

"After the end of the exploratory meetings there will be a phase of evaluations and consultations with His Majesty King Abdullah II, and we will have a meeting of the Arab League Follow-up Committee on February 4," he said.

"There we will take the decision."

In recent weeks, there have been reports suggesting high-level diplomatic discussions were under way about a broad deal intended to keep the Palestinians talking.

The reported deal could see Israel release up to 150 Palestinian prisoners, including senior political officials, in exchange for the Palestinians agreeing to waive their demand for a settlement freeze and dropping their bid for full UN state membership.



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Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 24, 2012
Israel carried out air strikes on the Gaza Strip overnight Monday, sources from both sides said, in what Israel said was a response to recent rocket fire against the Jewish state. Israeli planes targetted an arms factory in the centre of the Palestinian territory as well as three tunnels used for smuggling contraband, two in the north and one in the south, the army said in a statement. T ... read more


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