KHARTOUM,
March 27, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Arab
governments believe that whichever party wins the Israeli general
elections, slated for Tuesday, March 28, will only take more
unilateral steps to retain control over occupied Palestinian
territories.
"We
can't speculate about the result of the elections but the political
programs (of Israeli parties) are clear and most of them are not
conducive to reaching a real peace," Palestinian Foreign Minister
Nasser al-Kidwa told Reuters on Monday, March 26.
Over
five million Israelis will cast their ballot on Tuesday to elect
members of the 120-seat parliament.
No
less than 31 parties are battling for seats in the legislature,
although only half of them are expected to enter parliament.
On
the election eve, acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's Kadima
party was tipped to win 34 seats, Labour 21 seats and Likud only 13,
according to a poll by the Yediot Aharonot daily.
"Whoever
emerges in Israel, there is no peace process. All the parties in
Israel have proved that they are an obstacle to peace... They are all
faces of the same coin," agreed Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem.
Olmert
has proposed a platform of unilaterally setting Israel's permanent
borders, without consultations with the Palestinians.
He
said Israel intends to hold on to large Jewish settlement blocks in
the occupied West Bank, dividing Palestinian areas from each other and
making it more difficult to create a contiguous and viable Palestinian
state.
Israel
unilaterally withdrew from the Gaza Strip last year under the
"disengagement plan" of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon,
now in coma.
Worse
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Olmert intends to set Israel's permanent borders without consultations with the Palestinians. (Reuters)
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Lebanese
Foreign Minister Fawzi Salloukh sees little peace hopes with Israel's
continued policy of unilateralism.
"If
the political leaders in Israel continue in this mentality and this
spirit, there will be no peace," he said.
"They
have a policy of unilateral withdrawal from Palestinian land, in
separate pieces, setting up Palestinian cantons without links between
them to set up a Palestinian state."
Palestinians
fear they would bear the brunt of the Israeli elections if it paves
the way for the ruling Kadima party to push on with its plan to
unilaterally set the final borders.
Egypt
and Jordan, the two Arab countries which have peace treaties and
diplomatic ties with Israel, have also expressed similar anxiety over
Israel's unilateralism.
"Things
are going to be worse (after the elections), simply because of the
unilateralism," said a diplomat from one of the two countries.
"That
puts in jeopardy a peace process based on multilateralism and the
roadmap."
The
two countries are reluctant to air their anxiety over Israel's shift
towards unilateralism in public due to their relations with Tel Aviv,
according to Reuters.
But
Arab foreign ministers, meeting in Khartoum on Sunday, March 26, to
prepare for the Arab summit, rejected Israel's unilateral approach.
They
also reaffirmed the 2002 Arab peace initiative offering normal
relations with Israel in return for its withdrawal from the occupied
Syrian Golan Heights and all of the West Bank and Al-Quds (occupied
East Jerusalem) to the 1967 borders.