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German FM urges end to Gaza export ban

Egypt duo to hold Washington talks on peace process
Cairo (AFP) Nov 7, 2010 - Egypt's intelligence chief and foreign minister are to travel to Washington on Tuesday for talks with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the floundering Middle East peace process, the state-owned daily Al-Ahram reported. The visit by Omar Suleiman and Ahmed Abul Gheit will overlap with one by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is to meet Clinton on Thursday. Foreign ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki told Al-Ahram that the Egyptian delegation would discuss ways out of the current "blocked path" in peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians. Suleiman met Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Thursday after he and Abul Gheit held West Bank talks late last month with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

Peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians were relaunched in Washington on September 2 but broke down barely three weeks later with the expiry of an Israeli moratorium on settlement construction in the occupied West Bank. Netanyahu has stubbornly refused to reimpose the restrictions, despite a range of US incentives to do so, and the Palestinians have said they will not return to the negotiating table while Israel builds on land they want for a future state. US-led diplomatic efforts to unblock the process have been unfruitful, although the administration is expected to step up pressure on both sides after the mid-term US elections. In early October, Arab League foreign ministers said they would give Washington a month's grace period to break the impasse, but last week extended that until the end of the month, a Palestinian official told AFP on Friday. Egypt is one of two Arab countries, with Jordan, that have diplomatic ties with Israel. It has often mediated between Israel and the Palestinians.
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 7, 2010
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle on Sunday urged Israel to lift export restrictions against the Gaza Strip, on the eve of a visit to the impoverished Hamas-run Palestinian territory.

After talks with his Israeli counterpart Avigdor Lieberman, Westerwelle said the Palestinians needed improved economic prospects if peace talks were to stand a chance.

"We want to strengthen moderate Palestinian forces, and to do that we need better economic development," he told reporters.

"That is why I called for exports from the Gaza Strip to be permitted and made concrete proposals to my counterpart," Westerwelle added without elaborating.

Westerwelle, who is also Germany's vice chancellor, is on Monday to visit Gaza which is controlled by the Islamist movement Hamas.

He is to meet business leaders and representatives of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, visit a school and inaugurate construction on a badly needed sewage treatment plant, for which Germany is providing 20 million euros (28 million dollars) in funding.

He will not meet Hamas officials.

Lieberman said Israel was not convinced of any international demand for exports from Gaza.

"I'm not sure that there is place on the market," he said, despite what he called a successful programme for strawberry and flower exports to the Netherlands.

But in what Westerwelle called a "breakthrough," Lieberman said he expected progress "within two or three weeks" on the practical concerns holding up the construction of the Gaza sewage plant, near the Israeli border.

In early July, Israel gave the go-ahead for the international community to import construction materials into the Gaza Strip provided it supervises the projects for which they are used.

The move followed intense international pressure after a deadly Israeli raid in May on a fleet of aid ships bound for Gaza.

A blanket ban on importing building materials had stifled reconstruction in the Gaza Strip since Israel's devastating 22-day offensive, which ended in January 2009.

Although almost all civilian goods are now allowed into the territory, where most of the 1.5-million population relies on foreign aid, Israel's new regulations do not allow exports from Gaza.

On the floundering peace process, Westerwelle said the region could not afford "gridlock" and renewed a European call for Israel to halt settlement construction in the occupied West Bank.

US President Barack Obama relaunched direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians at the start of September.

But they ran aground just three weeks later, with Abbas refusing to attend talks unless Israel renewed a moratorium on settlement building.

Westerwelle, on his second trip to Israel and the Palestinian territories since taking office a year ago, also met with President Shimon Peres and the family of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

He called for Shalit's immediate release after more than four years being held in a secret location but declined to comment on reported German efforts to secure his liberation.

Hamas and other Palestinian groups captured Shalit in a deadly cross-border raid from Gaza in June 2006 and have demanded hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, including top militants, in exchange for his release.



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Egypt tells Israel peace process must move forward
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 4, 2010
Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman met Israeli leaders on Thursday and said the prospect of renewed Middle East peace talks with the Palestinians must not be allowed to slip away. "We are very concerned about moving the peace process forward," he told reporters at the start of a meeting with President Shimon Peres in Tel Aviv. "We still think that we have a golden opportunity, we shou ... read more







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