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Israel, Palestinians Declare End to Violence   Message List  
Reply Message #25234 of 55101 |
Israel, Palestinians Declare End to Violence
Tue Feb 8, 2005 08:22 AM ET
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=7568089
By Edmund Blair
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt (Reuters) - Israeli and Palestinian leaders proclaimed a
formal end to more than four years of bloodshed at a summit in Egypt Tuesday.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said he agreed with Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon to stop all violence. Sharon declared an end to military action at
the meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh, which was seen as a step back toward peace
talks.

"We have agreed with Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to cease all acts of violence
against Israelis and Palestinians wherever they are," said Abbas at the Red Sea
resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

"The calm which will prevail in our lands starting from today is the beginning
of
a new era."

Sharon said: "For the first time in a long time there is hope in our region for
a
better future for us and our grandchildren."

It was the highest-level meeting between the sides since a Palestinian uprising
blew up in 2000 after peace talks collapsed.

The two sides did not sign a formal cease-fire agreement and Israel emphasized
it
was dealing only with Abbas's Palestinian Authority and not the militants behind
attacks.

The host, President Hosni Mubarak, and Jordan's King Abdullah added their weight
to a summit that could prepare the ground for the revival of a U.S.-backed "road
map" toward a Palestinian state beside a secure Israel.

The United States has emphasized its new commitment to pursuing peace after the
death of iconic leader Yasser Arafat, who was seen by Washington and Israel as
an
obstacle.

HOPE IN WASHINGTON

"Optimism is certainly justified at the moment as far as the Middle East is
concerned," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Italian state television
after a brief visit to the region on which she met Abbas and Sharon.

"...I saw that these leaders have understood that it is time to move ahead," she
said.

However, Islamic militant factions have so far agreed only to a conditional
cease-fire, while neither side shows signs of budging on key obstacles like
borders, and whether Palestinian refugees get a "right to return" to land in
what
is now Israel.

Israeli and Palestinian flags flew side by side in the sunshine at the Red Sea
resort. Hundreds of Egyptian police, some with sniffer dogs, were deployed to
ensure security.

Violence broke out in September 2000 after the collapse of talks for a
Palestinian state on land captured by Israel in the 1967 war. Some 3,350
Palestinians and 970 Israelis have been killed.

DOUBT OVER MILITANTS

But despite Tuesday's announcements, doubt remains over the vital agreement of
militant groups behind suicide bombings, rocket and shooting attacks, though
they
have gone along with a de facto truce.

"There is no sense now in talking about a truce," Hassan Youssef of Hamas told
Al
Jazeera television. "We have not seen any serious pressures on the Israeli side
to take measures on the ground to prove its seriousness."

The factions have said Israel's promise to free 900 out of 8,000 Palestinian
prisoners, to pull back troops and end assassinations are not enough.

Although Abbas wants to co-opt the militants, rather than use force to rein them
in, Israeli officials said they wanted the groups dismantled and suggested that
even continued rocket building by the groups would be a cease-fire violation.

Abbas, then Arafat's prime minister, met Sharon in 2003 at the summit that gave
birth to the road map. But the peace plan soon foundered amid violence.

Israel says it is ready to coordinate with Abbas on its plan to withdraw
settlers
from occupied Gaza and part of the West Bank this year if violence stops and
Palestinians rein in militants, as they are meant to under the road map.

Palestinians fear Israel aims to cement its hold on the West Bank, and demand
the
Jewish state abide by a road map commitment to freeze settlement growth and also
stop building a barrier inside the West Bank. Israel says it stops suicide
bombings.

More potential pitfalls for peacemaking lie ahead.

Abbas holds strongly to the Palestinian line that a state must include all the
West Bank, including Arab East Jerusalem, and Gaza, and that refugees and their
millions of descendants should have the right to return to lands in what is now
Israel.

Those demands remain deal-breakers for Israel, which wants to keep major West
Bank settlement blocs, sees East Jerusalem as part of its own "indivisible
capital" and categorically rules out the possibility of refugees returning to
the
Jewish state.

(Additional reporting by Mohammed Assadi and Tom Perry in Sharm el-Sheikh, Nidal
al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Megan Goldin in Jerusalem)



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Tue Feb 8, 2005 2:34 pm

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Israel, Palestinians Declare End to Violence Tue Feb 8, 2005 08:22 AM ET http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=7568089 By Edmund...
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