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Mourners carry the bodies of two Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in Jenin Friday
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GAZA
CITY, February 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Israeli
occupation forces gunned down a Palestinian early Saturday, February
1, near Rafah, as the Palestinian leadership reaffirmed readiness to
discuss a ceasefire with Israel and revive peace talks.
Palestinian
security sources identified the new martyr as Tamer Heder, 19,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Earlier,
Israeli public radio quoted the army as claiming that a man armed with
an assault rifle had been killed near the border with Egypt.
Heder's
death brings to 2,916 the number of people killed since the September
2000 outbreak of the Palestinian Intifada against the Israeli
occupation, including 2,173 Palestinians and 687 Israelis.
Separately,
Israeli forces razed to the ground three homes and seriously damaged
five others during an incursion into Rafah and carried out an
incursion in Deir el-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, Palestinian
security sources confirmed.
Palestinian
Leadership Ready for Ceasefire
In
a state broadcast Saturday by the official WAFA news agency , the
Palestinian leadership said it was ready to discuss a general
ceasefire with the Israelis and immediately restart peace talks under
the guidance of the Mideast Quartet committee.
"The
Palestinian leadership said it was ready to conclude a general
ceasefire agreement in all the regions and restart negotiations as
soon as possible under the aegis of the quartet," the leadership
said after its meeting late Friday, January 31, in the West Bank town
of Ramallah.
The
Quartet, which comprises the U.S., E.U., Russia, and the U.N., is due
to propose a peace plan expected to call for a Palestinian state by
2005 and guarantees of Israeli security.
The
leadership also said it was "surprised at the negative response
of the Israeli government which has rejected a call for a re-launching
of dialogue and prefers the road of military escalation."
Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat, who has been a virtual prisoner in Ramallah
for 14 months, has twice this week expressed his willingness to meet
with re-elected Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, but has been
rebuffed.
The
leadership gave its backing to a dialogue between Palestinian factions
last month in Cairo aimed at coordinating stances. Another meeting is
set for the Egyptian capital on Tuesday, February 4.
"We
support this national dialogue and call for national unity which will
allow us to reach our objectives, an end to the Israeli occupation,
establish an independent Palestinian state with Al-Quds (Jerusalem) as
capital and solve the (Palestinian) refugee question," it said.
It
urged the factions to "put aside their ideological considerations
and ideas and put first the national interest."
Mubarak
Invites Sharon to Cairo
In
a related development, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak invited Sharon
to Cairo for talks aimed at reviving the Middle East peace process, an
official newspaper said Saturday.
Such
a meeting, which would be Sharon's first with an Arab leader since he
took office nearly two years ago, was announced by Sharon's office on
Wednesday, January 29, but was not confirmed in Egypt.
Ibrahim
Saada, editor in chief of the weekly Akhbar al-Yom, wrote of the
telephone call Mubarak made to Sharon to congratulate him on his
re-election and "his invitation to meet with him in Cairo to
discuss (ways of) stopping the violence and re-launching the peace
process."
Saada,
who is a confidant of Mubarak, did not give further details on any
trip.
Sharon's
office had announced Wednesday that Mubarak had proposed when the two
spoke on the telephone that they meet after the premier formed a new
government.
Egypt's
official MENA news agency confirmed the telephone conversation, but
mentioned nothing about the invitation.
Mubarak
told Al-Ittihad newspaper in Dubai on Tuesday, January 28, that he
felt Arab governments had to "deal with the Israeli prime
minister in a new way" in order to re-launch the Middle East
peace process.
Speaking
of Sharon's imminent re-election, the Egyptian leader said it would be
"inopportune to stay quiet."
In
July, Mubarak accused Sharon of deliberately "torpedoing all
initiatives".
Egypt
recalled its ambassador to Israel in November 2000 just after the
start of the Intifada, condemning "excessive use of force"
by the Israeli occupation army against innocent Palestinians in the
occupied territories.
Since
then relations between the two countries have been cool, although
Egypt has been trying to play the role of an intermediary to revive
the peace process.