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U.S. accord no attention to Palestinian cause at present, E.U. incapable of proposing independent initiative, Suleiman
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By
Abdul Raheem Ali, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
January 25 (IslamOnline) – Opening the new round of the Cairo-hosted
inter-Palestinian dialogue on Friday, January 24, Egyptian
Intelligence Chief Omar Suleiman asserted the importance of putting
forward a Palestinian initiative suggesting a one-year halt of
resistance operations inside Israel.
Speaking
for about one hour, Suleiman said such a halt of attacks would help
Egypt to throw its weight behind the Palestinian cause and push
towards revival of negotiations to find a way out of the current
standoff and help establish the Palestinian state with Al-Quds
(Jerusalem) as its capital.
Suleiman
also called on all Palestinian factions to act in unison in their
uphill struggle to save their cause and the future of the generations
to come.
The
Egyptian intelligence chief underlined that the Bush administration
accords no attention to the Palestinian’s deplorable conditions,
noting that the Iraq crisis had enfeebled the Arab situation in
general and the Palestinian cause in particular to the extent that
some observers had stigmatized the Palestinian resistance as being a
form of "terrorism."
Despite
their bona fide, the Europeans are incapable of putting forth an
independent initiative, Suleiman said, citing British Prime Minister
Tony Blair's failure to convince Israeli Premier Arile Sharon of allow
the Palestinian delegation to attend the London conference on
Palestinian political reforms.
Three
Main Suggestions
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Some Palestinian factions, especially Fatah, are expected to side with the Egyptian vision, said Fahd Suleiman |
In
exclusive press statements to IslamOline, Fahd Suleiman, head of the
Democratic Front for the Liberating of Palestine (DFLP) delegation,
said some Palestinian factions, especially Fatah, are expected to side
with the Egyptian vision.
He
noted that Mahmoud Abbas, who is leading Fatah delegation, underlined
the importance of coping with the current changes and steering clear
of what could harm the Palestinian cause or tarnish the image of the
Palestinian resistance in the eyes of the world.
He
added that main problem lies with the stances of Hamas and Islamic
Jihad, on the one hand, and the PFLP and the DFLP, on the other.
Hamas
and Islamic Jihad, he said, oppose, in principle, any halt of
resistance operations or declaration of truce.
The
two groups maintain that resistance is a legitimate right fairly
entitled to the Palestinian people to defend their land and holy
places against the Israeli occupation, said the DFLP official.
While
the PFLP and the DFLP, he remarked, reject to make such a concession
without an Israeli pledge to grind to cessation all Israeli
aggressions against Palestinian civilians and incursions into
Palestinian cities.
The
DFLP official added that the new round of talks will dwell on three
main suggestions.
First,
reviving the August 5, 2002, proposal to which Hamas had refused to
sign up.
Second,
putting forward a Palestinian initiative calling for protecting
Palestinian and Israeli civilians.
Thirdly,
restricting resistance operations in the Palestinian territories
occupied by Israel in 1967 to the Israeli soldiers and Jewish
settlers.
However,
the DFLP official did not say whether the Egyptian-proposed truce
would be also debated or not.
In
the meantime, Maher al-Taher, the head of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) delegation, called on Egypt to do
everything in its power to help release PFLP Secretary General Ahmad
Sa'daat, currently held inside an Anglo-American guarded Palestinian
prison in Areha under claims of protecting his life.
"I
underlined how it was imperative for all Palestinian factions to seize
the golden opportunity provided by Egypt and sincerely re-consider the
Palestinian status quo in order to draw a new Palestinian political
landscape, which should be given first and foremost priority,"
Taher told IslamOnline.
He
further said that he asked Abu Mazen about how serious Fatah is to go
for the principle of a unified political leadership, asserting that
Fatah wold not oppose the proposal as a basis for achieving the
Palestinian national unity.
Hamas
and PLO
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Ma'shal declined to comment on the truce matter. |
For
his part, Khaled Ma'shal, who is heading Hamas delegation to the
inter-Palestinian dialogue, said Hamas is flexible vis-ŕ-vis joining
the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), adding that Hamas had
not yet rejected the proposal.
Ma'shal,
however, averred that it was incumbent upon the PLO to make radical
changes in its institutions, so that it could play its role
positively.
He
declined to comment on the truce proposal but underlined that all
factions were capable of holding a serious and productive dialogue,
which placed national interests high on the agenda.
The
Palestinian delegations thanked Egypt for hosting the
inter-Palestinian dialogue, hoping the talks would result in positive
outcome to iron out the current standoff.