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WAR REPORT
Kerry pressuring the wrong side: Israel minister
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) March 16, 2014


Hamas cracks down on Gaza demo for Abbas's US talks
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) March 16, 2014 - Thirteen people were arrested on Sunday as Gaza security forces broke up a demonstration backing Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas ahead of key talks at the White House, organisers said.

The rally was organised by Abbas's Fatah party which is the dominant faction in the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority, but a minority in the Gaza Strip which is ruled by the rival Islamist Hamas movement.

Fatah official Mohammed Nahal said police attacked around 80 demonstrators as they were gathering in the square of the Unknown Soldier in Gaza City.

"The police and Hamas's internal security forces attacked them and dispersed the demonstration. They arrested 13 people and beat up others," he told AFP.

Police spokesman Ayub Abu Shaar confirmed the arrests, saying the protesters had no permit.

"Police broke up a gathering of a group of people who were demonstrating... because it was unauthorised," he told AFP.

Abbas will meet US President Barack Obama on Monday to discuss the crisis in peace talks with Israel ahead of a looming April deadline.

Obama met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this month as part of a Herculean effort to convince both sides to agree to a framework proposal to extend the talks to the year's end.

Israel shells Lebanon after border blast: security
Marjayoun, Lebanon (AFP) March 14, 2014 - Israeli armed forces shelled Lebanon on Friday after an explosion on their shared border, Lebanese security forces said.

In Jerusalem, the army confirmed that report, saying that it had acted after a border patrol was attacked with explosives.

The Lebanese source said "10 Israeli rockets hit an uninhabited border area and that there were no casualties".

The Israeli army said: "In response to the explosive device activated against IDF (Israeli army) soldiers, the IDF fired towards a Hezbollah terror infrastructure in southern Lebanon. A hit was confirmed."

Earlier, army radio said Israeli "artillery fired at southern Lebanon in retaliation for the explosion of a concealed device targeting a patrol".

"The device exploded near soldiers on the border in the Har Dov area," the statement added, using Israel's term for the disputed Shebaa Farms.

An Israeli minister on Sunday said Washington's top diplomat was "wrong" for pressuring Israel in peace talks, a day before Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas visits the White House.

His remarks came two days after US Secretary of State John Kerry criticised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's repeated demand that the Palestinians recognise Israel as a Jewish state.

"John Kerry is wrong because he is putting pressure on the wrong side," said Environment Minister Gilad Erdan, who is considered close to Netanyahu.

"Kerry should be asking Abu Mazen (Abbas) why he is stubbornly refusing to recognise Israel as the Jewish state," he told public radio.

The demand, which was only placed on the table several months ago by Netanyahu, has been consistently rejected by the Palestinians and is now threatening to derail the peace talks ahead of an April 29 deadline.

Kerry waded into the debate on Friday, saying he believed it was a "mistake" to raise the issue over and over again -- in what was taken as open criticism of Netanyahu.

"I think it's a mistake for some people to be raising it again and again as the critical decider of their attitude toward the possibility of a state and peace," Kerry told a congressional hearing.

He said such recognition was clear in UN resolutions and was also confirmed by the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in 1988 and in 2004.

The Palestinians, who recognised Israel as a state in the early 1990s, have said that accepting its religious character would ignore its Arab minority and amount to giving up on the "right of return" of Palestinian refugees.

Israel has not formally responded to Kerry's remarks.

Kerry is facing an uphill battle to get the two sides, which have reportedly failed to agree on anything, to clinch a framework proposal which would extend the talks beyond the April deadline until the end of the year.

On Saturday, another senior member of Netanyahu's cabinet poured cold water on Kerry's efforts by saying Abbas was not a partner for peace.

"He is not a partner for a final agreement that would include the recognition of Israel as the national state of the Jewish people and that would end the conflict and all claims," Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon told private Channel 2 television.

"I'm sorry to come to this conclusion, but this (peace agreement) will not happen in my time," said Yaalon, one of several hardliners in Netanyahu's government.

Abbas will meet US President Barack Obama on Monday, and is likely to raise the issue of Israel's pledge to release another 26 veteran Palestinian prisoners, which is due to take place on March 29.

But Israeli officials have said that without any movement in the peace talks, the release is unlikely to happen, especially as the group is said to include a number of Arab Israeli prisoners.

"I've already voiced my opposition," Yaalon told Channel 2.

"We made a commitment about Palestinian prisoners from the pre-Oslo period. We did not make a commitment about Arab Israelis," he said, without saying whether the release would take place.

"Abu Mazen is obstinate. He isn't prepared to make concessions," he said. "I don't know what is going to emerge from this but we aren't prepared to be extorted."

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