ISRAEL TRUTH TIMES

A blog dedicated to investigating events as they occur in Judea and Samaria, in Israel and in the world, and as they relate to global powers and/or to the Israeli government, public figures, etc. It is dedicated to uncovering the truth behind the headlines; and in so doing, it strives to do its part in saving Judea and Samaria, and by extension, Israel and the Jewish People, from utter destruction at the hands of its many external and internal enemies.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

So much for the claim that Hamas and Fatah are separate entities, and that the peace agreement signed in Yemen between them was a "mistake"'.

16:10 , 03.29.08

 
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Arab Summit
Photo: AP Mahmoud Abbas at Arab summit Photo: AP
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Abbas calls for Arab, international troops to protect Palestinians

Israel splitting territories into isolated cantons to prevent creation of independent state, Palestinian president tells Arab leaders in Damascus; ''think seriously of Arab and international protection for our people,' he says
AFP

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas sharply criticized Israel on Saturday, accusing it of wrecking peace negotiations with settlement construction. He also urged Arab leaders to send troops to protect Palestinians.

 

'Think seriously of Arab and international protection for our people," he told the Arab league summit in Damascus.

 

Abbas has called in the past for international peacekeepers in the Gaza Strip, a proposal that has been widely rejected. His call Saturday at an Arab summit in Damascus was the first time he urged Arab countries specifically to send forces.

 

Abbas charged that Israel was splitting the Palestinian territories into isolated cantons to prevent the creation of a state despite its pledge to peace efforts.








 

"Israel is continuing its aggression, its occupation, the construction of settlements and the Judaization of Jerusalem," Abbas told the opening session of an Arab summit in Damascus.

 

"The solution which Israel is designing consists of a group of cantons on a land separated by settlements, the separation wall and roadblocks," he said.

 

"This type of solution only reinforces the occupation and colonization and is aimed at preventing the creation of an independent Palestinian state," Abbas added.

 

He said the Israeli measures were continuing despite the relaunch of US-sponsored peace negotiations in Annapolis in November.

 

"We demand that our Arab brethren seriously consider offering Arab and international protection for our besieged nation," Abbas said while calling for the international community to "lift (the peace process) out of the ruins created by Israeli policies so that we can reach our objective and have a peace deal before the end of the year".

 

'Barbaric Israeli attacks'

The international community "must assume its responsibility and save the peace process and realize that if Israel continues to undermine the negotiations, this will have catastrophic consequences ..." he said.

 

"The next few months are going to be decisive. Reaching the end of the year without reaching a peace deal will trigger a new era of tensions in the region."

 

Abbas called on Arab leaders to re-endorse a peace plan that they initially adopted in 2002 offering Israel normalization with Arab states in return for its withdrawal from occupied lands.

 

"Re-endorsing the plan must accompany a move by the international community to force Israel to respond favorably to this initiative," he said.

 

"The success of negotiations is dependent on Israel's fulfillment of its obligations according to the roadmap (peace plan), particularly an end to settlement activity and military aggression against the Palestinian people and the lifting of the blockade and roadblocks," Abbas said.

 

He also condemned the "barbaric Israeli attacks" which have killed dozens of people in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip in retaliation for Palestinian rockets launched into southern Israel.

 

Abbas hailed a Yemeni initiative for reconciliation between the Islamist Hamas and his Fatah party which was expelled from Gaza last June, insisting that Hamas must give up power in the strip before talks can take place.

 

The Yemeni initiative appears to have little chance of success due to the different interpretations of the agreement by the rival parties.

 

Roee Nahmias contributed to the report 

 




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