ÚŃČí
 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

Search »

Advanced Search »

 


Arab Summit To Discuss Peace-plan, Thousands Demonstrate

Demonstrators, carrying Palestinian and Islamic flags, shout anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans during a demonstration in Lebanon..

BEIRUT, March 23 (News Agencies) - A much-discussed Saudi initiative for Middle East peace offers Israel "normal peaceful relations" in exchange for a withdrawal from Arab territories, according to a draft of the never-detailed plan published Saturday by a Lebanese newspaper.

As-Safir said the initiative, entitled "Palestinian file," will be presented as an "independent resolution" to be adopted at the two-day Arab summit beginning here on Wednesday, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz was quoted by the New York Times last month as suggesting Israel give back all Arab territory captured in the 1967 Middle East War in exchange for normal ties with its Arab neighbors.

According to the paper, the Saudi initiative calls for:

  • An Israeli pullout from Arab territories occupied in 1967, including Syria's Golan Heights and what Lebanese territory remains occupied;

  • Establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital;

  • Finding a just solution to the issue of Palestinian refugees in line with Resolution 194 (adopted in 1949 by the United Nations General Assembly)

  • Establishment of normal peaceful relations with Israel;

  • Encouraging the Israeli public to seize the Arab peace offer;

  • Greeting favorably U.N. Security Council Resolution 1397, which envisions Israeli and Palestinian states living peaceably side by side.

  • Entrusting the presidency of the Arab summit, the Arab League Secretary General and the follow-up committee (formed by several Arab countries after every annual Arab summit) to pursue the peace initiative.

As-Safir noted that the Saudi initiative says nothing about "right to resistance" or "backing of the intifada," or Palestinian uprising, against Israeli occupation.

The paper said Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan had previously decided not to disclose terms of the Saudi initiative in order to benefit from a "diplomacy of constructive vagueness, in order to leave room for change."

An Arab minister said in Cairo on Thursday that the Saudi offer "has been finalized during consultations made by Saudi Arabia in the last few days with various concerned parties.

"The differences in the formulation concerning relations with Israel and the issue of the Palestinian refugees have been settled," said the minister under condition of anonymity.

Arriving in Beirut Friday, the Arab League Secretary General Amr Mussa said the Saudi initiative had "strong chances of being adopted unanimously."

Mussa also said that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat might still attend the Arab summit after being trapped by Israeli troops in the West Bank city of Ramallah for nearly four months.

U.S. envoy Anthony Zinni's mediation between Israel and the Palestinians raised some hope a truce could be forged, ending the 18-month intifada and clearing the way for Israel to permit Arafat to travel to Beirut.

"There is still a possibility that President Arafat will attend the summit, but there are also obstacles," Mussa told journalists on his arrival here from Cairo.

"Arafat is besieged by the forces of Israeli occupation, who will permit him to leave the occupied territories but who may stop him from returning."

In other matters relating to the summit, Arab economy ministers will open the Arab League Economic and Social Council.

Lebanese Economy Minister Bassel Fleihan and Arab League Secretary General Amr Mussa are expected to deliver speeches at the council's opening session and hold a press conference.

A Lebanese economic ministry official told AFP that the council is due to review the relatively new pan-Arab free trade zone and also ways to boost exchanges in the sectors of transportation, electricity, tourism, labor and medicinal drugs.

Fourteen Arab states - Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Iraq and the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council - have so far approved the free trade agreement decided at the Arab summit in Cairo in 1996.

The 14 states started to abolish customs tariffs in 1998 and are expected to have removed them completely by 2005.

Lebanon plans to present a document to the council which calls for "a special treatment for less developed Arab countries, mainly through joining the free trade agreement," the ministry official said.

The Lebanese document also calls for establishing a joint Arab office for medical drugs and for facilitating exchanges in the services, trade and transportation, he said.

Beirut, which became notorious for shelling, hostage-takings and car bombings during the 1975-1990 civil war, is determined to make every effort to guarantee security at the event.

Meanwhile, thousands of people in the Middle East demonstrated against Israel and the United States and in favour of the Palestinian uprising on Friday ahead of the Arab summit.

The largest rally was staged late Friday in Beirut as about 10,000 people from across the political spectrum cast aside their rivalries and marched through the streets to the downtown Martyrs Square to show their solidarity with the Palestinians.

It was the biggest such demonstration in the Lebanese capital since the Palestinian uprising, or intifada, against Israeli occupation started 18 months ago.

Showing the depth of their support, members of the Resistance Movement Hezbollah marched side by side with rank-and-file leftists from the Communist and Baath parties, all in the name of the intifada.

At the front of the crowd were prominent Muslim politicians, including former prime ministers Salim Hoss and Omar Karam, who have backed the heavy Syrian presence in Lebanon.

Beside them were Christian leaders like MP Nassif Lahoud who have voiced strong opposition to Syria's dominant role in Lebanon's politics.

Demonstrators waved posters of Arafat and Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, both of whom are certain to be topics of discussion at the summit.

"Arab leaders who are going to meet in Beirut must take real measures to rise to the challenges facing the Arab world," Hoss said. The rally dispersed calmly after about two hours.

Earlier in Lebanon, Palestinian refugees and Lebanese urged Arab states to stand firm in their support for the intifada. In the southern port city of Sidon 3,000 Lebanese and Palestinian Islamic leaders rallied under tight security, calling for an Islamic Palestinian state from the Mediterranean to the Jordan River.

The leader in Lebanon of the Palestinian Resistance Movement Hamas, Ossama Hamdan, warned Arab leaders: "We do not want normal relations. The victory will not be achieved but with the intifada that you must support."

There were also rallies in the northern Lebanese port of Tripoli, burning an an Israeli and an American flag and denouncing the Saudi initiative.

In Egypt, about 3,000 people gathered in the Al-Azhar mosque compound in the center of Cairo before being peacefully dispersed by police, witnesses told AFP.

The protestors called for "death" for Israel and chanted "Down with the United States.".

Anti-Israel protests have taken place in Egypt, mostly on university campuses, on an almost daily basis for nearly two weeks, following massive Israeli raids into the Palestinian territories.

In Jordan hundreds rallied outside a mosque in the northern city of Irbid chanting slogans of support for the Palestinian uprising, the national news agency Petra reported.

The protest was organized by Jordan's opposition Muslim Brotherhood, the agency said. The speakers also condemned U.S. policies towards Islam, the Palestinian people and Iraq, the agency added.

Jordan banned protests in the month after the outbreak of the uprising in September 2000 but has tolerated some of them and authorised others in the past few weeks amid a rise in Israeli military escalation.

In Yemen, thousands rallied in Sanaa in support of Iraq and the intifada, burning an effigy of Sharon.

Yemenis chanted slogans against normalisation with Israel, an apparent jibe at the Saudi plan.

 

Yesterday's News  

Search Articles 

 

 

News Archive :
Day:   Month: Year:   


Send Mail

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims | IOL Radio

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map