OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, January 6 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Risking a
diplomatic fall-out with Britain Monday, January 6, Israel banned
Palestinian officials from attending a Middle East conference to be
hosted in London next week by Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Israel
was not invited to the conference, aimed at speeding up reforms in the
Palestinian Authority (PA).
The
meeting has been called to gather a number of Arab states as well as
members of the so-called Quartet pushing for Middle East peace - the
European Union, Russia, the United Nations and United States.
Press
reports said Sharon was annoyed at the snub, as well as Blair’s
plans for a separate meeting with Israeli opposition Labor leader
Amram Mitzna, ahead of Israel’s January 28 general elections, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Labor
and other critics condemned the travel ban, accusing Sharon of
encouraging “terrorism” by cracking down on “moderates” in the
Palestinian camp.
The
Israeli leaders want to link the Palestinians’ struggle to liberate
their occupied land to “terrorism”, ignoring dozens of U.N.
Security Council resolutions calling on the Jewish state, that came
into existence in 1948 on the land of Palestine, to withdraw from the
Arab territories occupied in 1967.
Netanyahu
vs Straw
The
ban brought Sharon’s hard-line Foreign Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
head to head with his British counterpart, Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw, who asked Israel to think again about the bar.
“The
six million people who live in Israel and the three-and-a-half million
people who live in parts of the occupied (Palestinian) territories can
only live in peace if they are going to have a future.
“Therefore,
I greatly regret the announcement” to ban Palestinians, he said.
Netanyahu said in a statement that “the Palestinian leadership does
not need to meet abroad to close down suicide kindergarten camps to
stop incitement to murder and to fight terrorism.”
“Until
the Palestinian leadership does so, it must be given no quarter and no
legitimacy in the free world.”
Observers
and analysts, however, accuse Netanyahu and Sharon of “deliberately
overlooking the daily aggressions perpetrated by the Israeli
occupation forces against the Palestinians, the assassinations, house
demolitions, as well as choking curfews that turn the Palestinians’
life into a continuous nightmare”, forcing them to hit back in any
possible way.
Also,
leaders in the region, notably Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, has
repeatedly warned Israel against the dangers of cornering the
Palestinians into hitting back, thus drowning the whole region in a
vicious cycle of violence.
Other
observers have warned time and again that Sharon has no political
agenda, and extended their warns to the former general himself,
accused of committing war crimes in several European countries, that
his “atrocities against the Palestinians” will never grant the
Israelis any sense of security.
The
Sunday operation, according to such observers, is a clear evidence of
this.
Labor
Against Travel Ban
Former
Labor ministers who quit the Sharon government last year deplored the
move.
“Certainly
we must fight terrorism with all our strength, which the army is
doing, but this is a lamentable decision, which instead of reducing
terrorism will encourage it further,” Matan Vilnai said.
Ephraim
Sneh, for his part, expressed the fear of a worsening of relations
with London.
Former
foreign ministry head David Kimche commented, “The Tel Aviv attack
is shocking and explains the government's angry reaction, but this
reaction is nonetheless idiotic, because it will set the whole world
against Israel.”
Kimche,
a former senior official in the Mossad intelligence agency, compared
it with last year’s “absurd” siege and virtual destruction of
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s Ramallah headquarters.
“Here
again, instead of weakening Arafat we are strengthening him by
preventing a reform process,” he said.
Moshe
Maoz, a professor at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, added, “This
decision shows that the government is incapable of envisaging any
solution but a military one to the conflict.”
Palestinians
Still Prepare for London Talks
On
the Palestinian front, Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo Monday
said a delegation of Palestinian Authority (PA) officials was still
preparing for talks in London despite the Israeli ban.
“This
morning we sent the names of our delegation to the British government.
We will continue our preparations despite the Israeli ban,” he told
reporters in Ramallah.
Abed
Rabbo said that Sunday evening’s attack, claimed by two Islamic
resistance groups and an armed offshoot of Arafat’s Fatah movement,
provided Sharon with an excuse to scotch the London talks.
“Sharon
wants to use what happened yesterday to cover his real strategy of
destroying Palestinian society and the Palestinian Authority.”
“The
operation was very useful to Sharon,” he said, adding that the
Palestinians would investigate who was behind it.
For
his part, Palestinian Minister Saeb Erakat said the measures “are
fanning the flames and will not give Israel security and stability”,
adding, “On the contrary, they mean continued chaos and violence.”
He
said the ban on Palestinians going to London “amounts to forbidding
talks on an eventual resumption of the peace process” and called for
immediate international intervention “to stop Israel’s actions and
monitor an Israeli withdrawal from the Palestinian territories.”
U.S.
Refuses to Criticize Ban
For
its part, Washington refused to criticize the Israeli decision, with a
White House spokesman saying President George W. Bush believes
“Israel has a right to defend itself in a variety of ways, but
Israel needs to always be mindful of the consequences of its right to
self-defense.”
Observers
also lashed out at the U.S. blaming it on the deterioration in the
Middle East, arguing that by always putting the blame on “the
victim”, Washington encourages the aggressor party to go on in its
practices of “self-defense”.
Both
Israel and the United States have called for Arafat, head of the PA
and the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), to be replaced as the
Palestinians' leader, claiming he has done too little to combat
terrorism.