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WAR REPORT
Bill curbing Jerusalem talks sparks Israel cabinet battle
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 21, 2013


Israeli, Palestinian talks intensifying: Kerry
Paris (AFP) Oct 21, 2013 - US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Monday that talks between Israel and the Palestinians were intensifying and that all issues were on the table.

He also announced that Qatar had agreed to provide $150 million (110 million euros) in debt relief to the Palestinian Authority.

Speaking after talks with Arab League officials in Paris, Kerry said Israeli and Palestinian negotiators had so far held 13 meetings, including three meetings in the last four days alone.

"The pace has intensified, all the core issues are on the table and they have been meeting with increased intensity," Kerry told journalists at a joint press conference with Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah.

Since becoming secretary of state in February, Kerry has dedicated much of his energy to restarting peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians, which were frozen in September 2010.

Under intense US pressure, the two sides resumed direct talks for the first time in nearly three years in Washington at the end of July.

"It is no secret to anybody that this is and remains a difficult process, there is no shortage of passionate sceptics," Kerry said.

"The Israeli and Palestinian people both have leaders who absolutely understand what is at stake and they have taken risks to bring both parties to the table."

Kerry praised the Arab League's "remarkable commitment" to pushing the peace process, saying it is "critical to creating the momentum and the seriousness of purpose that is essential in order to be successful in these talks."

He praised the Qatari move to provide "urgently needed" debt relief to the Palestinians and said he was "confident" that other Arab countries would follow suit.

Attiyah meanwhile said the Arab League was "concerned about the environment" surrounding the peace talks, singling out the expansion of Israeli settlements and the continued isolation of the Gaza strip.

"We talked about the issue of Gaza and the futility of isolating Gaza," he said, in comments translated into English.

"There are millions of people living in Gaza and they are in need of food supplies and medicine," Attiyah said.

"There must be a way to open the crossing points to all parties to enable the people in Gaza to live."

Kerry is to meet later this week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Rome to discuss the peace talks.

Israel's chief peace negotiator Tzipi Livni was on Monday filing an appeal after ministers approved a bill aimed at curbing peace talks on the future of Jerusalem, her spokeswoman said.

The draft law, a copy of which was seen by AFP, seeks to prevent any negotiations on the future of the Holy City without first obtaining a two-thirds majority of 80 of the 120 members of the Israeli parliament.

It was approved late on Sunday by a 5-4 majority within the nine-member ministerial committee responsible for preparing draft legislation to put to parliament.

"Since there have been occasions in the past when talks have begun on handing over parts of the city, we must legislate to ensure that this possibility does not arise" without a two-thirds majority, which "cannot be achieved easily," the text reads.

Livni, who serves as justice minister and heads the centrist HaTnuah, voted against the bill along with three other ministers, one from her party and two from the centrist Yesh Atid.

Were the bill to be passed, it would mean negotiators could not even begin discussing Jerusalem without first obtaining a mandate from two-thirds of MPs.

"She is going to file an appeal today," her spokeswoman Maya Bengel told AFP, without giving further details.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose government has been conducting direct talks with the Palestinians over the past two months following a three-year negotiation freeze, reportedly opposes the bill.

Livni's appeal means the bill will now be put to the full 22-member cabinet, in a move that will significantly reduce its chances of going forward as the final decision on whether to put it to a vote will be in Netanyahu's hands, Maariv newspaper reported.

The two sides resumed direct talks for the first time in nearly three years in Washington at the end of July, following intense US pressure.

The future status of Jerusalem is one of the most sensitive issues of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Israel captured east Jerusalem during the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community.

Israel regards the whole city as its "eternal, indivisible" capital, but the Palestinians want the eastern sector as capital of their future state.

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