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"The abandoning of the roadmap initiative could lead to a worsening of the situation and also to terrorist measures," Mubarak (AFP)
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HANOVER,
Germany, April 16 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Saudi Arabia
Friday, April 16, joined Egypt and Jordan in voicing concern for the
future of Middle East peace in the face of Washington's backing for an
Israeli plan to pull out of the Gaza Strip but retain parts of the
West Bank occupied in 1967.
Earlier
Friday, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak said Friday that the Middle East roadmap must be
followed and decisions should not be made "over the head of
Palestinians."
Within
the same context, Russia called on Israel Friday not to stop at
withdrawing from Gaza, but to follow that step up by implementing the
roadmap for peace in the Middle East.
And
the European Union insisted Friday the "roadmap" to Middle
East peace had not been driven into a dead end after the dramatic U.S.
policy reversal that has enraged Palestinian opinion and threatened
again to strain transatlantic ties.
"Convinced
of the impact of America's attitude towards the chances for peace in
the region, Saudi Arabia hopes that it reconsiders the situation and
does the necessary to prevent a total collapse of the peace
process," an official Saudi spokesman told the state news agency
SPA.
"No
one has the right to make these concessions, in the name of the
Palestinian people, concerning our just rights," he added.
American
support for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan "threatens
to annul" the international "resolutions and accords"
so far reached, warned the Saudi spokesman.
Jordan
has meanwhile insisted on the Palestinian right of return, which Bush
has now explicitly ruled out.
In
Amman, Foreign Minister Marwan Moasher stressed Thursday Jordan's
"insistence on the right of return and the need for agreement to
settle this issue in conformity with the Arab peace initiative."
Mubarak,
Schroeder
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"Palestinians have a right to expect that decisions are not made over their heads, " Schroeder
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Mubarak,
speaking to Egyptian editors before leaving Texas, where he met Bush,
underlined that "Israeli withdrawal from Gaza should not be
linked to any guarantees granted by any party regarding a definitive
settlement, especially the issues of border and refugees' right of
return," according to the Egyptian dailies.
Mubarak
insisted on an Israeli pullout from land occupied in the 1967 Middle
East war, "as is mentioned in U.N. Resolutions 242 and 338, and
the right of return stipulated in UN Resolution 193," they added.
The
Egyptian leader also insisted on an Arab peace initiative adopted in
Beirut in 2002 which offered Israel normal relations in exchange for
its withdrawal from all the 1967 territories and a just settlement of
the refugee issue.
On
a stopover in Hanover after talks in Washington, Mubarak said that
questions over future borders and the return of Palestinian refugees
must be negotiated with the Palestinian and Israeli sides.
"The
abandoning of the roadmap initiative could lead to a worsening of the
situation and also to terrorist measures," the veteran Egyptian
leader warned, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
At
a joint press conference, Schroeder said that "Palestinians have
a right to expect that decisions are not made over their heads."
Both
leaders, however, greeted Israeli plans to withdraw from the Gaza
Strip, saying it added new impetus to efforts to achieve lasting peace
in the Middle East.
But
the chancellor warned against rushing prematurely into negotiations on
the final status of a Palestinian state which could "create
prejudices."
Mubarak
flew to Hanover, central Germany, to brief Schroeder over his talks
with U.S. President George W. Bush earlier this week.
In
Cairo, the Arab League described Bush's declarations as "very
dangerous" and "legally baseless," warning they could
"strengthen Israel's occupation."
In
Damascus, the ruling party newspaper Al-Baath, accused Bush of
having "slammed the door on the peace process."
Flouting
successive United Nations resolutions, Bush said Wednesday it was
"unrealistic" to expect Israel to pull out from all land
captured in the 1967 war.
He
also said Palestinian refugees should not be allowed to return to
lands lost to Israel in 1948, when the Jewish state was created.
His
comments caused outrage in the Middle East and a cautious response
from Europe.
Critics
say that Israel's plans to maintain some settlements in the West Bank,
while abandoning the Gaza Strip, is a unilateral effort to define
future borders.
The
roadmap, drawn up by the United States, United Nations, European Union
and Russia, envisages a viable Palestinian state with mutually agreed
borders in return for Israel's security.
Russia,
E.U.
In
Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov Friday called on Israel
to follow up its decision to withdraw from the Gaza Strip by
implementing the roadmap.
A
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip would be "important, positive, but
only a first step on the road to a general settlement, including the
creation of an independent Palestine, living at peace with
Israel," Lavrov told reporters after talks with his Palestinian
counterpart Nabil Shaath.
The
roadmap "is the only means to resolve the situation in the Middle
East. All actions must be aimed at reinforcing the roadmap and this
applies to the plan for withdrawal from the Gaza Strip," Lavrov
said.
Shaath,
for his part, said that "any withdrawal by Israel from occupied
territory should be a first step towards a complete withdrawal from
all occupied territories, including East Jerusalem."
The
European Union's Irish Presidency Friday, weighed in, reaffirming the
EU's commitment to the roadmap.
EU
governments tried to minimize differences among the diplomatic
"quartet" sponsoring the peace deal after Bush’s historic
change of policy Wednesday.
The
political bombshell dropped by Bush risks straining transatlantic ties
brought to near breaking point last year by the war in Iraq - another
pressing issue being tackled by EU foreign ministers at two-day talks.
The
Irish presidency said repeatedly that it welcomed Bush's
"reaffirmation" of elements of the roadmap, which is
designed to create a Palestinian state next year living in peace
beside Israel.
But
European frustration over the outcome of talks Wednesday at the White
House between Bush and Sharon was laid bare by Irish Foreign Minister
Brian Cowen.
"It
remains the case that Israel has to make peace with its enemies, not
its friends," Cowen told a news conference before heading into
the EU talks in central Ireland.
"Everyone
knows that any attempt to solve the conflict unilaterally will not
bring lasting peace. Any viable, long-term settlement needs to be both
agreed and inclusive," he said.
The
57-member Organization of the Islamic Conference also weighed in,
announcing it would hold an emergency meeting on April 22.
The
diplomatic quartet would itself convene around a week later, EU
foreign affairs chief Javier Solana said in Tullamore.
He
said the meeting was "already called for around the 28th,
probably in Berlin". An EU diplomat said the meeting would
involve quartet foreign ministers and U.N. officials.