Abbas
holds truce talks in violence-scarred Gaza
By
Adel Zaanoun
AFP
GAZA
CITY
Petroleumworld.com
05 24 07
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas convened talks
on Wednesday hoping to consolidate a truce between rival factions in Gaza and
revive a ceasefire with Israel after bloodshed that has cost 90 lives.
He met prime minister Ismail Haniya away from the cameras at a secret location
to discuss strengthening a fragile five-day Palestinian truce that halted deadly
clashes between their secular Fatah and Islamist Hamas factions.
Abbas, the Fatah chairman, and Haniya of Hamas thrashed out ways to shore up
the ceasefire and end armed clashes between their supporters, presidential spokesman
Nabil Abu Rudeina said.
The president also discussed "the question of a truce (in Israeli-Palestinian
violence) and the possibility of expanding it," said Haniya spokesman
Ghazi Hamad.
" Abu Mazen and Haniya discussed the escalation of Israeli aggression, especially
the assassinations and air strikes," said Abu Rudeina.
Fatah and Hamas loyalists waged fierce street battles for a week, leaving more
than 50 people dead, shaking their fragile unity government and sparking international
calls for restraint before abiding by a truce on Saturday.
The bloodshed, coupled with stepped up Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel and
resumed Israeli air strikes, have undercut international efforts to revive peace
talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
A six-month truce with Israel collapsed during the internecine Palestinian bloodshed
in Gaza as militants fired scores of rockets towards the Jewish state and Israel
retaliated with the deadly air raids.
On Monday, the beleaguered Palestinian government called for a comprehensive
truce that would apply not only to Gaza but also to the occupied West Bank, although
there has been no formal reaction from Israel.
Abbas later met the main armed groups, including Hamas, during which officials
said he would ask them to stop firing rockets in order to broker a truce for
Israel to stop operations in Gaza and the West Bank.
Afterwards, the factions said they were ready for a simultaneous and global truce,
implying that Israel should also end its operations in both Gaza and the West
Bank.
" We are ready for a truce as long both parties apply it at the same time
and it is a complete ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank," Hamas
spokesman Ayman Taha told a news conference.
Other faction leaders made similar statements.
Israeli air strikes in Gaza have killed 12 civilians and 25 militants since they
resumed last week.
The raids have failed to halt the rockets, however. More than 120 have slammed
into Israel over the past week, killing a woman, wounding 16 others and sending
hundreds fleeing the town of Sderot that has borne the brunt of the fire.
In all 90 people, including at least 20 civilians, have been killed in Gaza since
Fatah-Hamas fighting sparked the bloodshed on May 13. Fifty-three people have
died in the inter-Palestinian violence.
Israel has threatened that no leaders in Hamas -- the senior movement in the
Palestinan coalition government -- were immune from attack.
On Wednesday six more rockets exploded in southern Israel, without causing casualties
or damage, an Israeli military spokeswoman said.
The attacks came after seven people were wounded when Israeli helicopter gunships
opened fire over Gaza City and the northern town of Jabaliya, local medics and
witnesses said.
Pressing the diplomatic front, Abbas is on Thursday expected to receive EU foreign
policy chief Javier Solana in Gaza City.
" We need a political dialogue to solve the crisis... This is the only solution," Solana,
currently in Egypt, said on Tuesday.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon's newly appointed special coordinator for the Middle East
peace process, Michael Williams, is also due to begin meetings with Israeli and
Palestinian officials on Thursday.
The four international sponsors behind the stalled Middle East peace process
will meet in Berlin next Wednesday against a backdrop in the region that
the German foreign ministry has described as "extremely worrying."
AFP 23 2044 GMT 05 07
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