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WAR REPORT
Kerry meets Israeli chief peace negotiator in London
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) May 15, 2014


2 Israel soldiers fired for opposing settler evictions
Jerusalem (AFP) May 15, 2014 - Two Israeli soldiers have been dismissed from their unit for campaigning on Facebook against orders to evict Jewish settlers on the West Bank, the army said Thursday.

"Two soldiers who have confessed to having posted photographs of themselves calling for a refusal to obey orders have been dismissed from their unit," the army said in a statement.

"Use of the social media for protest is not acceptable in view of the values of the Tsahal" or Israeli army, it said.

The two soldiers had posted a photo with their faces concealed behind a poster reading: "Soldiers of Battalion 50... do not evacuate Jews."

The battalion could be called upon to take part in the eviction of Jews from "illegal" settlements on the West Bank.

On Wednesday, Israeli military forces demolished structures in a settler outpost southeast of the Palestinian town of Bethlehem after attempts at a voluntary evacuation failed, the army said.

Israeli media said the army was also to raze more than a dozen structures in two other outposts, Ramat Gilad and Givat Assaf, by the weekend.

Israel considers settlement outposts built without government approval to be illegal. They usually consist of little more than a few trailer homes.

But the international community regards all settlements built on Palestinian land in the West Bank -- including east Jerusalem -- as illegal.

US Secretary of State John Kerry Thursday met with Israel's chief peace negotiator Tzipi Livni in London, just weeks after his relentless bid to broker a treaty with the Palestinians came screeching to a halt.

US officials confirmed that the top American diplomat had held surprise talks with Israeli Justice Minister Livni, as they took advantage of both being in London at the same time for different meetings.

Kerry voiced concern after two Palestinians were shot dead by Israeli forces Thursday during a protest outside the Ofer prison near Ramallah, on the West Bank.

Kerry "again urges both sides to refrain from unhelpful steps," a senior State Department official said in a statement.

"He is concerned about the violent incident that took place today outside the Ofer prison and calls upon both sides to exercise maximum restraint."

Kerry met Livni after holding talks on Wednesday in the British capital with Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas in the wake of the collapse last month of the peace process.

The State Department official said he and Livni both happened to be in London "and it provided an opportunity for them to catch up since the pause in the negotiations".

Kerry gave Livni the same message as he had stressed to Abbas -- that the fate of the talks lies in the hands of the Israelis and Palestinians.

"While the door remains open to peace, the parties must determine whether they are willing to take the steps necessary to resume negotiations," the US official said.

Kerry had also reiterated to Abbas on Wednesday that any Palestinian government must recognise Israel and commit to non-violence.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague later tweeted to confirm he had also met with Livni for talks on the peace process, urging that the "opportunity for peace must be seized".

Kerry coaxed the Israelis and the Palestinians back to the negotiating table in July 2013 after a three-year hiatus, and both sides agreed to keep talking for nine months.

But the April 29 deadline expired with the peace process in disarray, forcing Kerry and his team to declare a "pause" in the negotiations.

In more violence in the region, Israeli border police shot dead two Palestinians on Thursday during a demonstration in the West Bank marking the 66th anniversary of the Nakba, or "catastrophe" of the Jewish state's creation in 1948.

The shooting triggered a warning from the Palestinians that they may "seriously consider a halt to security coordination with the Israeli side," Palestinian security spokesman Adnan al-Damiri told AFP.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meanwhile on Thursday accused the Palestinians of teaching their children that Israel "should be made to disappear".

The Israeli answer was to "continue building our country and our unified capital, Jerusalem", said the right-wing premier.

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