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Mubarak warns Israel PM against new Gaza war

EU's Ashton meets Palestinian chief in talks drive
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Jan 6, 2011 - EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on Thursday called for an immediate meeting of the Mideast peace Quartet to tackle the impasse in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. The call was made in a statement issued after she met Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas at his headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah to discuss ways to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table. "During my talks, we discussed latest developments and ways to move beyond the current impasse," said Ashton, adding that she had urged both sides to find "a satisfactory way to engage without delay in substantive negotiations on all final status issues."

"I propose the Quartet meet as soon as possible to help find a solution to the current impasse," she said, suggesting that such a meeting could take place on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in early February. Her remarks were made a week after Abbas called on the Mideast Quartet, which is comprised of the United Nations, the United States, Russia and the European Union, to spearhead efforts to forge a new peace plan. "We demand that the Middle East Quartet and the various UN bodies, headed by the Security Council, draft a peace plan which conforms with international law, instead of keeping up negotiations which do not solve the problem," Abbas said on Friday in remarks broadcast on Palestinian television. Ashton said there was "no alternative to a negotiated solution," and said the European Union would do whatever possible to help both parties reach an agreement.

The two met as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh holding talks with President Hosni Mubarak about the crisis in the peace process. Direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians, the first for nearly two years, began on September 2 but hit a crisis just three weeks later when an Israeli ban on settlement building expired. Since then, the Palestinians have refused to continue talking until Israel renews a freeze on settlement activity. Last month, Washington admitted that its efforts to coax Israel into reimposing a new freeze had failed, with international efforts now focusing on drawing the two sides into some form of indirect dialogue.
by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) Jan 6, 2011
Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak on Thursday warned Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu against launching a new war on Gaza, as they met in a bid to break the impasse in Middle East peace negotiations.

Mubarak's remarks were made during joint talks in the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, which came after several weeks of rising tensions and clashes along Israel's border with the Palestinian enclave.

At the meeting, the Egyptian leader warned of the "danger of the latest Israeli threats and their repercussions on the stability and security of the region and the cause of Middle East peace," the official MENA news agency reported.

"Mubarak affirmed Egypt's rejection of any new offensive on Gaza," it said.

Senior Israeli officials have warned in recent weeks that Israel could launch another strike on Gaza, like the devastating 22-day war that ended in January 2009.

That offensive killed some 1,400 Palestinians, around half of them civilians, and 13 Israelis, 10 of them soldiers.

Following the war, the number of rocket attacks dropped significantly, although 230 rockets and mortar rounds were fired into Israel last year, the army said.

Israel's vice prime minister Silvan Shalom said last month that Israel would be forced to "respond with all our force" if Gaza militants kept firing rockets into the Jewish state.

The warnings were made against the backdrop of almost daily rocket attacks and retaliatory Israeli air strikes on Gaza.

Late on Wednesday, Israeli troops shot dead two Palestinians who were apparently trying to breach the border fence after a day in which militants fired seven projectiles, most of them mortar rounds, into southern Israel without causing casualties or damage.

Mubarak also warned the Israeli leader about the impact of a surge in violence on the deadlocked peace talks with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

Direct talks between Netanyahu and Abbas stalled in September last year when Israel refused to renew a moratorium on settlement construction in the occupied West Bank.

The Palestinians have refused to continue talking while Israel builds on land they want for a future state.

The Egyptian leader stressed the need for Israel "to revisit its stances and policies, and to take tangible steps to build trust" with the Palestinians, MENA said.

A statement from Netanyahu's office described the meeting as "friendly and comprehensive."

Netanyahu highlighted the central role of Egypt in pushing forward the peace process and requested that Mubarak exert pressure on the Palestinians to return to "direct, intensive and serious negotiations," the statement said.

Netanyahu also updated Mubarak on the fence that Israel is building along the Egyptian border, aimed at stopping the influx of African illegal immigrants into the Jewish state.

One of the stumbling blocks to any peace deal is the rift between Abbas and Hamas, which ousted the Palestinian leader's Fatah faction from the Gaza Strip in 2007 and rejects any form of negotiations with Israel.

Israel and Egypt imposed a tight blockade on Gaza after Hamas seized power there, and since then, Egypt has failed in efforts to to mediate a unity deal between the rival Palestinian factions.

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