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Halting Israeli settlements 'vital' for talks: Palestinians
by Staff Writers
Panama City (AFP) May 11, 2013


Israeli opposition chief urges Abbas back to talks
Jerusalem (AFP) May 12, 2013 - Israeli opposition leader Shelly Yachimovich on Sunday urged Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas to seize the chance of resuming peace negotiations as the two met for talks at his West Bank headquarters.

According to a statement from her office, the two discussed "the situation in the Middle East and the chances of making progress between Israel and the Palestinians".

"Now is the time to respond to US mediation efforts to renew the talks," she told him, referring to Secretary of State John Kerry's bid to draw the parties back into direct negotiations after a hiatus of more than two-and-a-half years.

It was, she said, "important to return to negotiations immediately and to examine the positions of both sides on all issues".

In the run-up to January's general election, Yachimovich, who heads the centrist Labour party, ran a campaign focusing almost exclusively on socio-economic issues and scarcely mentioned the Palestinian question.

In Sunday's meeting, she told Abbas she had made clear to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the opposition would "provide a security net for him if he takes significant steps toward a political solution with the Palestinians".

"The Labour party is deeply committed to the peace process and to the two-state solution," she said, while pointing out that Israel's "highest priority" was the security of its citizens.

Several days ago, Yachimovich praised a move by the Arab League to amend its 2002 peace initiative to incorporate the principle of mutually agreed land swaps in the context of a final peace deal.

And she said Labour would consider entering government if any of the more hardline coalition partners threatened to bolt should peace talks take off in earnest.

Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al-Malki said Saturday that halting Israeli settlement construction was "vital" to resume long-stalled peace talks.

The Israeli government signed off on plans Thursday to build nearly 300 new settler homes near Ramallah, just days after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly ordered a freeze on tenders for new West Bank settler homes to avoid harming US-led efforts to bring both sides back to the negotiating table.

"For us, stopping settlement construction is vital, important and essential to really sit down and talk about the subject of negotiations," Malki said.

"Without this, it will be difficult, if not impossible to find a Palestinian interested in sitting down and talking with the Israelis.

"It is not a Palestinian condition. It is a requirement by the international community," he added.

Malki was speaking in Spanish to reporters during a press conference in Panama City as he wrapped up a tour of Central America.

US Secretary of State John Kerry plans to make his fourth trip to Israel and the Palestinian territories on May 21 or 22 for talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

Kerry, along with "all international leaders as well as the Israelis, knows that any potential to resume negotiations requires first that Israeli completely stop all settlement construction in the occupied Palestinian territories," Malki said.

But he noted that Kerry had "taken the responsibility to talk to the Israelis to find a solution to the conflict." Malki said the chief US diplomat had spoken five times with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas during the past month and a half.

The foreign minister pointed to "different and contradictory versions" by Israel about a settlement freeze.

"You do not know what is the truth and who is telling the truth," Malki added.

Direct peace talks collapsed shortly after they were launched in September 2010 because of an intractable dispute over Israel's settlement building, which is widely accepted as a violation of international law.

The Palestinians say they will not return to negotiations unless Israel freezes construction on land they want for a future state.

Malki also condemned twin car bombs that killed at least 43 people and wounded 100 earlier in a Turkish town near the Syrian border. Ankara has blamed the attack on pro-Damascus groups.

"We condemn theses attacks, no matter who is responsible. We must condemn them with the strongest language and with as much force as possible," Malki said.

"You cannot resolve conflicts and problems by sacrificing the lives of innocent people."

He speculated that the perpetrators of the attacks may have sought to prevent the holding of an international conflict on the long-running civil war in Syria.

The bombings were the deadliest in Turkey, a key supporter of the Syrian opposition, since the conflict started more than two years ago. The war has since killed more than 70,000 people.

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