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Palestinian: Stop expanding settlements
UNITED
NATIONS (AP) — Palestinian Foreign Minister Nasser Al-Kidwa expressed pessimism
Thursday about Israel's intentions in the West Bank following its withdrawal
from the Gaza Strip, demanding international action to stop expansion of
settlements and the construction of a separation wall.
In a tough speech to the U.N.
General Assembly, he said action to end these "illegal" and "inhuman" activities
was essential "to safeguard the future of the Middle East and maintain the
prospects for peace."
While Al-Kidwa recognized that the
Israeli withdrawal from Gaza was an important development, he accused Israel of
leaving the strip "completely devastated" and called its occupation of Gaza "one
of the worst injustices in recent history."
Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has reaped diplomatic rewards for ending the
country's 38-year Gaza occupation. In the past two weeks, Qatar, Pakistan and
Indonesia have held high-level public meetings with Israel — a rare event for
Muslim countries — and Sharon met Friday with Jordan's King Abdullah II for
their first talks in months.
The Palestinians are prepared to
return to negotiations and to start quickly implementing the road map peace plan
drafted by the so-called Quartet — the United States, the United Nations, the
European Union and Russia, Al-Kidwa said.
He reiterated Palestinian leader
Mahmoud Abbas' readiness "to begin final status negotiations immediately."
But in addition to halting
settlement activities and construction of the West Bank barrier, he said, there
must be quick solutions to outstanding issues in Gaza. They include the Rafah
crossing into Egypt, the airport, the seaport, and the link between the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip
Al-Kidwa
said the Palestinians recognized that the Gaza withdrawal required "political
boldness," but stressed the government would be watching to see what Israel does
next.
"All of this will determine whether
the disengagement will take us further steps forward, closer to a comprehensive
settlement and peace — or whether it is actually a step imposed by the realities
on the ground and intended to facilitate the continuation of the occupation ...
of the West Bank, and to obstruct a final settlement," he said.
Al-Kidwa stressed that Israel's
continuing control over Gaza's borders and airspace was evidence its occupation
has not ended — and he warned that without a permanent link to the West Bank and
freedom of moment the densely populated strip cannot survive economically or
politically.
"What Israel is doing in the West
Bank, particularly in East Jerusalem, is cause for us to be even more
pessimistic," he said, citing continuing construction of the barrier in
violation of a ruling by the International Court of Justice and a General
Assembly resolution.
In his speech Thursday to the U.N.
summit, Sharon said the Palestinians are entitled to their own state and his
country has no desire to rule them.
He urged reconciliation and
compromise with Palestinians to end their conflict. But he said that after
Israel's Gaza withdrawal, it was up to the Palestinians to "prove their desire
for peace" by halting terror and disarming militants.
Al-Kidwa said the Palestinians "will
continue to exert efforts to impose law and order" and to build democracy,
including holding elections at all levels. "Israel must stop its attempts to
interfere in and sabotage these elections," he said. |