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“Let us start implementing the roadmap and -- in parallel -- let us start discussing the permanent status issues,” Abbas told Israelis. (Reuters)
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GAZA
CITY, January 15 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas called Saturday, January 15, for a mutual
ceasefire with Israel and talks on a final peace settlement while
Israeli occupation forces gunned down at least seven Palestinians in
the Gaza Strip.
“We
are seeking a mutual ceasefire to end this vicious cycle,” Abbas,
aka Abu Mazen, told Palestinian lawmakers in his inauguration speech,
reported Reuters.
“In
the last few days, a number of incidents have taken place. We condemn
these actions, whether by the Israeli occupation forces or the
reactions of some Palestinian factions.
“This
does not help bring about the calm needed to enable a credible,
serious peace process,” said Abbas.
The
new Palestinian leader stressed that Israelis must learn to live
side-by-side and share land with the Palestinians in order to end the
conflict.
“From
this forum, I say to the Israeli leadership and to the Israeli people:
we are two peoples, destined to live side by side and to share this
land between us.
“Let
us start implementing the roadmap and -- in parallel -- let us start
discussing the permanent status issues so that we can end, once and
for all, the historic conflict between us,” Abbas said.
Palestinians
Killed
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Palestinians carry youth shot dead by Israeli soldiers in Rafah refugee camp. (Reuters)
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In
a related development, Israeli occupation forces gunned down Saturday
at least seven Palestinian in separate attacks in the Gaza Strip.
Five
Palestinians, including a policeman, were killed during an Israeli
incursion into the Zeitun neighbourhood of Gaza City, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP) quoting medical sources.
Witnesses
earlier reported that around 10 Israeli armored vehicles thrust into
the area.
The
Israeli occupation army claimed the two tried to attack an Israeli
force which rolled into Zeitoun from the nearby Jewish settlement of
Netzarim.
Meanwhile,
two Palestinians were killed and five wounded by Israeli fire in the
Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip Saturday, Palestinians
medics said.
The
shooting happened in the Brazil neighborhood of the camp, said the
director of the city's hospital, Ali Mussa, identifying one of the
dead as Nidal Abu Tuyur, 22.
The
new Palestinian fatalities bring to 4,704 the total number of people
killed since the September 2000 outbreak of the Intifada, including
3,649 Palestinians, according to an AFP tally.
Israel
had sealed off Gaza, suspending the movement of Palestinians and goods
in and out of the occupied territory, following an attack on a
crossing point Thursday that left six Israelis and three Palestinians
dead.
Claiming
responsibility for the attack, three Palestinian resistance factions
said it came in retaliation for “Israel’s non-stop policy of
aggressions and assassinations.”
Ties
Ruptured
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Qorei accused Israel of “trying to find any excuse to disrupt any serious effort that leads to reviving the peace process.”
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Abu
Mazen’s call for a mutual ceasefire came a few hours after Israeli
Premier Ariel Sharon decided to rapture all ties with the new
Palestinian leader.
“Israel
is severing all planned contacts with the Palestinians on all levels,
from security to government leadership,” Sharon’s spokesman said.
Palestinian
Minister of Negotiation Affairs Saeb Erekat told Reuters that Israeli
officials had called him to relay Sharon's decision to Abbas.
“I
told them that we reject that you hold Abu Mazen responsible because
he is not sworn in yet as president,” Erekat said.
“The
only way to end this vicious cycle of violence is by resuming peace
talks and not suspending them.”
Palestinian
Prime Minister Ahmed Qorei agreed.
“This
is a wrong decision and shows that Israel is trying to find any excuse
to disrupt any serious effort that leads to reviving the peace process
and to achieving calm.”
Qorei
stressed that there are “parties on both the Palestinian and Israeli
sides who want to obstruct attempts to restart peace moves and achieve
calm. So it is wrong to seize any opportunity to justify taking that
path.”
Abbas
condemned the Gaza attack and Israeli raids on Palestinian areas,
saying the vicious circle would not “benefit peace.”
He
repeatedly rallied against the militarization of the Intifada, seeing
negotiations as the viable option in dealing with the Israeli
occupation to restore Palestinian rights.
US
Secretary of State Collin Powell hoped the Israeli decision would be
“temporarily.”
Prospects
for an end to four years of bloodshed appeared to brighten when Sharon
called Abbas earlier this week to congratulate him on his election
victory.
It
was the highest-level contact between the two sides in years after
Israel shunned late Arafat, claiming he was an obstacle to peace.
Sharon
and Abbas had been widely expected to meet soon to discuss security
coordination in the run-up to Israel's planned pullout from Gaza later
this year and a possible resumption down the line of talks on peace
and Palestinian statehood.