BEIRUT,
March 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Arab League chief Amr
Mussa joked Saturday, March 23, about Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon's wish to attend next week's Arab summit, insisting the Arabs
would study the matter, news agencies reported.
"You
are surely asking this question as a joke," he responded with a
laugh to a reporter asking him about Sharon's interview with the Washington
Post on Saturday, March 23, in which Israel's hawkish leader said
he would like to attend the Arab summit in Beirut, Agence France-Presse
(AFP) reported.
However,
Mussa added: "If Sharon wanted to come, we will study whether we
can allow him to do so."
"And
if he did attend, we will consider if we will allow him to go
back," he said, provoking a round of applause among Arab
journalists. Mussa was referring to the Washington Post
interview in which Sharon said "I don't know if he [Arafat] is
going to Beirut. We have not yet decided whether to let him go."
Sharon
said that he would like to attend the Arab summit in Beirut next week
to outline his views on Middle East peace. "In talking to the
Americans, I suggested that I'll go to Beirut to talk to the Arabs
about what might be achieved and I would welcome an American
initiative to advance such a move," he said.
Washington
has urged Israel to seriously consider allowing Arafat to attend the
Arab summit.
Sharon
said Tuesday, March 19, Arafat would be free to leave the Palestinian
territories only after a ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinians
and warned that he could be barred from returning if he uttered
"incitements to violence" or "terrorist
operations" were launched against Israel in his absence.
The
Beirut summit is to focus on a Saudi proposal, which has been welcomed
by Washington, to normalize relations with Israel in exchange for an
Israeli withdrawal from Palestinian territories occupied since the
1967 war.
Sharon
expressed guarded interest in the Saudi proposal. "What's
interesting is the vision of peace and normalization with all the Arab
world. But there appears to be a precondition - Israeli withdrawal to
the '67 borders. Israel will not be able to do that if it wants to
survive," he said.
However,
Sharon suggested a three point plan of his own starting with a
complete ceasefire followed by confidence-building measures in line
with blueprints worked out by U.S. CIA Director George Tenet and
former U.S. senator George Mitchell.
This
will be followed by a long-term interim agreement granting the
Palestinians territorial continguity without naming final borders and
finally, the final borders between the two states would be determined
in the spirit of UN resolutions 242 and 338.
Meanwhile,
Jordan's Foreign Minister Marwan Moasher on Saturday, March 23,
dismissed media speculation on the Saudi's Mideast
peace initiative, saying a final text of the plan would only be
completed at the Arab summit.
"The
press has published nothing but hypotheses on this subject. The
initiative will be submitted to the summit and a committee will write
up the text which will be submitted for approval to the leaders,"
Moasher told reporters upon arriving in Beirut for the March 27-28
summit of Arab leaders.
Moasher
was responding to the reported leaking of a draft of the
groundbreaking Saudi peace proposal to Lebanon's As-Safir
newspaper on Saturday.
As-Safir
said the initiative, full details of which had not previously been
made public, provides for "normal peaceful relations" with
Israel in return for an Israeli pullout from Arab lands captured in
the 1967 Middle East war.
The
draft of the proposal, entitled "Palestinian File", also
calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as
its capital, finding a "just solution to the issue of Palestinian
refugees and encouraging the Israeli public to seize the Arab peace
offer."
The
newspaper notes that the Saudi initiative said nothing about any
"right to resistance" or a "backing of the intifada,"
which has been raging since September 2000.
It
said the initiative will be presented as an "independent
resolution" for adoption at the two-day Arab summit, which begins
Wednesday, March 27, at the luxury sea-front Phoenicia hotel under
tight security.
The
paper quoted the prince as suggesting that Israel give back all Arab
territory captured in the 1967 Middle East War in exchange for normal
ties with its Arab neighbors.