Tuesday, February 09, 2010, Safar 24, 1431 A.H   ISSN 1563-9479
 Group Chairman: Mir Javed Rahman Founded by: Mir Khalil-ur-Rahman Editor-in-Chief: Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman 
HOME | TOP STORIES | WORLD | NATIONAL | BUSINESS |  SPORTS |  KARACHI | LAHORE | ISLAMABADPESHAWAREDITORIAL | OPINION | STOCK INSTEP TODAY  NEWSPOST
  WEEKLY SECTIONS
    News on Sunday
    You
    Health Body & Mind
    Technobytes
    Iqra
    Galaxy
    Tapestry
    Education-Zine
    Us
    Cyber@print
    Investor's J.
    Viewers' Forum
    Today's Cartoon
    Style
    Business & Finance Review
    Instep
    MAG Fashion
    Blog
  FEATURES
   Opinion Archive
   Fashion Archive
   Magazine Archive
   Style Archive

  FINANCE
   Currency Rates
   KSE Index
   Bullion Rates
   Prize Bonds

Share this story!   
 Sarkozy urges ME peace talks
Israel to build 900 illegal Jewish housing units in al-Quds

Wednesday, November 18, 2009
OCCUPIED-AL-QUDS: Israel approved the construction of hundreds of illegal new housing units in annexed east al-Quds on Tuesday, driving another stake into troubled US efforts to restart Middle East peace talks.

The interior ministry said it approved the construction of 900 new units in Gilo, one of a dozen of Israeli settlements in mostly Arab east al-Quds, adding that the project still faced review.

Earlier, Israeli media reported that hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had refused a request from main ally Washington to halt construction in Gilo. It was not clear whether the request concerned the project approved on Tuesday.

The approval is likely to further hamper Washington’s so-far futile efforts to get Israelis and Palestinians back to the peace table, amid deep disagreements over the thorny issue of settlements.

The Palestinians demand that Israel freeze all settlement construction, including in east al-Quds, before resuming the talks, while Israel has so far offered only a temporary and limited ease in building.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Tuesday that the impasse has given him no choice but to seek international recognition of a Palestinian state, even as Europe and Washington discouraged the move.

“We feel we are in a very difficult situation,” he said in Cairo after talks with Egyptian counterpart Hosni Mubarak. “What is the solution for us? To remain suspended like this, not in peace? That is why I took this step.”

Palestinian officials said earlier this week they intended to ask the UN Security Council to recognise a state in a move analysts said was aimed at pressuring Israel amid the floundering US peace efforts.

The European Union, the Palestinians’ biggest donor, joined the United States in discouraging the move and urged instead a return to peace talks with Israel.

“I don’t think we are there yet,” Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, told reporters in Brussels.

“I would hope that we would be in a position to recognise a Palestinian state but there has to be one first, so I think it is somewhat premature,” he said. The United States said it opposed any unilateral moves.

“We support the creation of a Palestinian state that is contiguous ... We are convinced that has to be achieved through negotiations between two parties,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said on Monday.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, who is due to meet with Abbas in Amman later on Tuesday and with Israeli leaders in al-Quds the next day, said he will insist on a resumption of negotiations.

“We have to find ways to surmount the current obstacles,” he told the Palestinian al-Quds daily.

Netanyahu has warned that “any unilateral action will undo the framework of past accords and lead to unilateral actions from Israel.”

And the Islamist movement Hamas, also poured cold water on the move for international recognitiion.

“The proclamation of a Palestinian state should be the result of the resistance putting an end to the occupation ... and not a decision taken by (the Palestinian Authority) to fill the void after the political option has failed,” Hamas’s exiled political supremo Khaled Meshaal said in a statement.

Tuesday’s construction approval will make the relaunching of talks more difficult because the issue of settlements in east al-Quds is particularly sensitive.

The Palestinians want east al-Quds as the capital of their promised state and insist Israel stop building houses there.

The international community considers all Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land illegal.

Meanwhile, the French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived on Tuesday in Riyadh for talks with Saudi King Abdullah after warning of an extremist backlash if Middle East peace talks do not commence soon.

Abdullah greeted Sarkozy late in the afternoon at King Khalid International Airport and the two then headed for the king’s desert farm in Riyadh’s outskirts, where Sarkozy will spend the night.

In a visit billed as more personal and aimed at tightening bonds, the two leaders are expected to review key regional political issues, with the impasse over Palestinian-Israeli peace talks at the top of the list.

“The priority is to restart as soon as possible the peace process,” Sarkozy told the Saudi newspaper Al-Riyadh in an interview published on Tuesday.

“It is urgent because the current deadlock plays into the hands of extremists and each day the chance of peace is slipping away a little,” he said.

Share this story!   
Back     |    Send this story to Friend    |     Print Version
 
Google
 
The News Home  |  Jang Group Online  |  Jang Multimedia  |  Jang Searchable  |  Ad Tariff / Enquiry |  Editor Internet  |  Webmaster