Palestinians reject Israeli conditions for peace deal
August 23rd, 2010 - 8:59 pm ICT by IANSRamallah, Aug 23 (DPA) Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat rejected Monday three conditions set by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a peace agreement, calling them “unacceptable”.
“There is a difference between negotiations and dictation,” Erekat told a news conference in Ramallah, commenting on Netanyahu’s statement that any peace deal should be based on an end to the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, recognition of Israel as “the national state of the Jewish People,” and “real and sustainable security arrangements on the ground”.
The Israeli leader outlined his three “components” to his cabinet Sunday, while discussing the announcements made Friday in Washington and in Brussels that direct peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians will begin next month.
Erekat said Monday he believed that an agreement “on all core issues can be reached within 12 months. It is doable. It is time for decisions and not (for) negotiations.”
“Now we hope that Netanyahu, if he’s given the choice between settlements and peace, would choose peace; if he’s given the choice between reconciliation and an historical agreement and the confrontation or continuation of the occupation, he would choose the reconciliation,” Erekat said.
But the veteran negotiator said the talks would come to an end if Israel resumed construction in West Bank settlements once a 10-month building freeze ends Sept 26.
Netanyahu declared the partial moratorium, after weeks of US pressure, in November, in a bid to get peace talks going again.
Erekat said Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas had written to the so-called Quartet of the US, Russia, the UN and the European Union, expressing the hope they would force Israel to stop its settlement activities.
Erekat would prefer to see a total halt to settlement construction everywhere in the Palestinian territories, and not just an extension of the moratorium post Sept 26.
He stressed that submitting new tenders would endanger the continuation of negotiations.
“It is not a Palestinian condition, it is the first Israeli obligation,” he said.
“We never focused on whether or not to go to the negotiations, we have focused on how to go, and any negotiation needs terms of reference, a time frame and obligations from both sides as provided in the Quartet statement (of) Aug 20.”
The upcoming negotiations will be the first direct peace talks to be held by the sides in nearly two years. The last round of direct negotiations was suspended in late 2008, as Israel entered the election campaign which ultimately brought Netanyahu to power.
Indirect talks between the sides, mediated by US envoy George Mitchell, got under way in the spring.
- Palestinian UN bid not to be withdrawn even if talks resume: Abbas - Oct 11, 2011
- Israel should meet its obligations to revive peace: Abbas - Dec 31, 2011
- Palestinians not optimistic about peace with new Israeli government - May 09, 2012
- Dozens of Palestinians wounded in clashes with Israeli soldiers - Mar 31, 2012
- Israel welcomes invitation to resume peace talks - Aug 20, 2010
- Netanyahu expects direct talks to begin in two weeks - Aug 01, 2010
- No alternative to peace talks: Abbas (Lead, Changing dateline) - Sep 16, 2010
- US concerned over Israeli housing construction in West Bank - Aug 10, 2011
- Israel warns Palestinians against 'unilateral steps' - Nov 16, 2009
- PM Netanyahu says Israel "quite serious" on peace talks - Nov 12, 2010
- Israel-Palestine direct talks end in Egypt - Sep 14, 2010
- Israel okays West Bank housing ahead of Biden visit - Mar 08, 2010
- Hundreds of Palestinians celebrate unity deal - May 04, 2011
- Ehud Barack: 'Death of negotiations only benefits Hamas' - Nov 01, 2009
- UN chief in West Bank to push for peace talks - Mar 20, 2010
Tags: benjamin netanyahu, core issues, israeli leader, israeli prime minister, israelis and palestinians, mahmoud abbas, minister benjamin netanyahu, palestinian negotiator, palestinian president mahmoud, palestinian president mahmoud abbas, partial moratorium, peace agreement, peace deal, peace talks, president mahmoud abbas, prime minister benjamin, security arrangements, settlement activities, settlement construction, west bank settlements