GAZA
CITY, October 18 (IslamOnline & News agencies) - A U.S.-backed
roadmap for ending the Middle East conflict is not
"credible" unless it comes with guarantees, including an
Israeli withdrawal from the occupied Palestinian territories, the
Palestinians said Friday, October 18.
"Any
new initiative must be accompanied by guarantees," Nabil Abu
Rudeina, a senior advisor to Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, told
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"We
demand the Israelis retreat from all the territories occupied since
1967 and the halt to the aggression against the Palestinian
people," he said.
Unless
it came with those provisions it would not be "credible," he
said.
The
(so-called) U.S. "roadmap," to achieve peace between Israel
and the Palestinians, presented earlier this week to Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon in Washington, calls for establishing an interim
Palestinian state before the end of 2003. Shortly thereafter, the
draft plan calls for both sides to begin negotiations for a permanent
agreement, including final borders, to be completed by 2005, according
to Israeli daily Ha’aretz.
It
was drawn up last month in New York by the so-called diplomatic
Quartet - the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United
Nations - trying to solve the chronicle crisis.
A
high-ranking Israeli official told reporters Friday that Israel would
study the document championed by U.S. President George W. Bush.
"Nobody
has any intention of imposing it on us. It is only a plan that takes
up the principles already presented by President Bush," he said.
"What
is important is that it is a document that lays out stages, and the
passage from one stage to another depends on the application of the
preceding one," he added.
The
official stressed that the first phase of the plan calls for "a
halt to (Palestinian) terrorism and the reforms of the Palestinian
Authority."
Bush
called on June 24 for a Palestinian state alongside Israel on
condition that Palestinians dump Arafat - whom he accuses of terrorism
and corruption - as their leader.
However,
observers and analysts have since then paid little consideration to
Bush’s talk about peace, citing the U.S. clear support for
Sharon’s hostile policies.
The
U.S. leader is also sending his top diplomat for the Middle East,
William Burns, to the region this week for talks on counter terrorism,
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Iraq.
But
Abu Rudeina said Washington has not contacted the Palestinian side
about Burns' visit.
Relations
between the sides have been chilly since Bush implemented the decision
in June to have his administration deal with Palestinian officials
other than Arafat.
Meanwhile,
an international group of diplomats will next month present detailed
proposals to resolve the Middle East crisis and create a Palestinian
state by 2005, a senior Palestinian Minister said Friday.
The
quartet would unveil the plan in November, said International
Cooperation Minister Nabil Shaath.
The
quartet "is making progress. I hope they really conclude a
comprehensive detailed plan with a timeline, with monitoring on the
ground," he told reporters after talks with the Danish Presidency
of the European Union.
"I
believe some progress is being made... We are hopeful that something
can be done" to secure peace and progress," said Shaath, who
held separate talks with the quartet members in Paris Thursday,
October 17.
The
group met in New York in September and agreed on a general framework
to ensure peace and stability in the Middle East - crucially including
the aim of creating a Palestinian state by 2005 - but failed to fill
in the details.
For
his part, Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller said, “Palestine
has to make its reforms, has to show restraint and stop the suicide
bombers and Israel has to stop the escalation each time there has been
a suicide bomber".
Condemning
Thursday's attack, he added: "Of course we're very depressed
about the situation in Gaza, the killings in Rafah, the attack there,
we do not think it's helpful killing children and civilians. It's not
the way forward."
"How
much blood are we going to waste on that road?"
The
condemnation followed a statement from the EU presidency urging
restraint.
"Irrespective
of the circumstances, the lives of civilians, be it children or
adults, must be protected and spared," it said.
The
15-member union also called on Israel to deliver to the Palestinian
Authority tax revenues which it has been refusing to hand over.
"Israel
has to give money back to the Palestinian Authority to alleviate the
situation and make the economy rise again" said Moeller.
Shaath
added that Palestinians were "devastated by the siege, the
continued attack by Israel on civilians and the destruction of
Palestinian property and keeping away the money."
"For
two years now, more than 1.5 billion dollars have been taken by Israel
from our tax revenues and our custom duty revenues and so on, while we
are suffering near starvation," the Palestinian Minister said.