BRUSSELS,
May 15 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - E.U. envoys failed Wednesday
to work out the legal terms for taking in 13 Palestinian resistance
activists expelled from their homeland after taking refuge in the Church
of the Nativity in Bethlehem, European sources said.
The
13 Palestinians - exiled without other members of their families - were
flown to Cyprus on a British air force plane Friday, May 10, as part of
a deal brokered by the E.U. and the United States to end the 39-day
Israeli army siege of Christianity’s holiest sites.
E.U.
ambassadors ended a one-day meeting Wednesday, May 15, with no
agreement, but said they would hold more talks Thursday, May 16, the
sources said, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"A
lot of details have been settled, but there is still work to do,"
said an official close to the Spanish E.U. presidency.
The
failure to reach a quick agreement on Wednesday came as a security
official in Cyprus warned that the Palestinians were at risk in the
Mediterranean island.
"The
dangers posed to their safety increases the longer they stay here
because of the island's proximity to the Middle East," said the
security source.
The
Palestinian freedom fighters are being held at the Flamingo Beach in the
southern coastal resort town of Larnaca.
The
Greek Cypriot daily newspaper Phileleftheros reported that
security arrangements at the hotel were reviewed due to fears that
Israel would change its mind and demand the 13 back.
The
key sticking point was the status to be granted to the Palestinians
which will determine how much freedom of movement they will enjoy.
Six
E.U. countries expressed a willingness to take in the Palestinians:
Belgium, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.
But
the governments who agree to take them in "would like to find
wording that would mean that all of the E.U. would be committed in one
way or another," an E.U. diplomat told AFP.
Some
governments want the 13 to be given the same status in all
host-countries, a request that appeared difficult to grant given the
differences in legislation.
Cyprus
says Brussels assured it that within a week or so several E.U. countries
would take in the activists.
After
visiting the 13 on Wednesday, Spanish Ambassador Ignacio Garcia
Valdecasas expressed his country's willingness to take in "some of
them," but did not elaborate.
On
Monday, May 13, E.U. foreign ministers endorsed a deal whereby the 13
resistance activists would be resettled in several E.U. member states.
The
E.U. may not make a final decision on the destination of the 13 until
the weekend, diplomats said, according to Israeli daily newspaper Ha’aretz.