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WAR REPORT
Palestinians to lobby UN if prisoners not freed on time
by Staff Writers
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) March 25, 2014


Kerry to meet Palestinian leader Abbas in Amman Wednesday
Rome (AFP) March 25, 2014 - US Secretary of State John Kerry will travel to Amman Wednesday, interrupting a visit to Italy to meet with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas as a deadline looms for reaching a peace deal with Israel.

Kerry's surprise trip aims "to continue to narrow the gaps between the parties", State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Tuesday, a tacit acknowledgement of the difficulties bogging down the negotiations.

The US diplomatic chief would also be in touch with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "over the phone or by video conference", she added.

Kerry coaxed the two sides back to the negotiating table in July after a three-year hiatus, but the talks have stumbled as he has sought to hammer out an agreed framework to guide the next few months.

The new meeting with Abbas comes just over a week after the Palestinian leader visited the White House to meet President Barack Obama for what were described as "difficult" talks.

Kerry's unexpected plans to leave the Italian capital only hours after arriving came as fresh tensions arose over the peace talks, which he is struggling to keep on track and hopefully extend beyond an April 29 deadline.

Arab leaders meeting Tuesday in Kuwait were expected to back a Palestinian refusal to recognise Israel as a Jewish state, an Israeli demand that threatens to derail the talks.

In a draft statement endorsed by foreign ministers, the summit stressed a "categorical rejection" of the demand for recognition of Israel as a Jewish state and rejected "all pressures exerted on the Palestinian leadership" to force it into agreeing.

Negotiations also risked being waylaid by a row over the release of prisoners by Israel.

Israel pledged when talks began in July to release 104 veteran Palestinian prisoners in four batches, in exchange for the Palestinians refraining from pursuing legal action against the Jewish state in international courts.

But after the release of a total of 78 inmates so far, Israeli cabinet ministers have warned that the final remaining batch of prisoners will not be freed on March 29 unless the Palestinians agree to extend the talks beyond the April 29 deadline.

Palestinian leaders however have threatened to renew their diplomatic push at the United Nations for statehood if Israel fails to free the prisoners as scheduled.

Complicating the standoff, Palestinian leaders have called for Israeli Arabs to be among those released at the weekend.

Kerry arrived in Rome late Tuesday from The Hague, having peeled away from the side of Obama who is also on a European tour which will see him travel to Italy and the Vatican City for Thursday talks.

It was unclear whether Kerry would return to the Italian capital to join up again with Obama, or continue on to Riyadh where the US president is due to meet King Abdullah on Friday.

Palestinian leaders threatened Tuesday to renew their diplomatic push at the United Nations if Israel fails to free Arab prisoners as scheduled this weekend.

When US-sponsored Israeli-Palestinian peace resumed in July, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas agreed that, during their nine-month duration, he would shelve efforts to use the UN's November 2012 recognition of Palestine as a non-member observer to press for membership in international bodies where it could fight Israeli occupation.

In exchange for that diplomatic ceasefire, Israel was to release 104 Arabs imprisoned since before the 1993 Oslo peace accords between the sides.

It has so far freed 78 with the final batch due for release on March 29.

"We shall turn to the UN's international organisations if Israel does not release the fourth and final group of prisoners," said Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organisation's executive committee.

"The release of the prisoners is in return for the freeze on seeking membership in international organisations," he told official Voice of Palestine radio.

Israel wants the so-far inconclusive peace talks extended beyond their April 29 deadline, and ministers have warned that should the Palestinians refuse, the remaining prisoners will not be freed.

"If Israel were to refuse to free the fourth batch it would have serious consequences, including initiatives at the United Nations," former Palestinian negotiator Mohammed Shtayeh, said in a statement.

Israel particularly objects to the Palestinians' demand for Arab Israelis or Palestinian residents of Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem convicted of militant acts to be included in the release, even though both groups were included in a 2011 swap of 1,027 Arab prisoners for captive soldier Gilad Shalit.

A senior Palestinian official told AFP that, in recent talks with US special envoy Martin Indyk, Abbas warned that if the April 29 talks deadline was not met "Israel would be in violation of agreements and (the Palestinians) would have the right to turn to the UN and to take any measures it deems appropriate."

US Secretary of State John Kerry will meet Abbas in Amman Wednesday, State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said Tuesday

Kerry's trip aims "to continue to narrow the gaps between the parties", she said adding that the US diplomatic chief would also be in touch with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "over the phone or by video conference."

The prisoner issue is not the only bone of contention jeopardising the peace talks.

Repeated Israeli announcements of new settlement construction -- condemned by the international community -- and the killing of nine Palestinians by Israeli forces in the West Bank since the beginning of the year have enraged the Palestinians.

And Netanyahu's demand that they recognise Israel as "the nation-state of the Jewish people" has been rejected by Abbas.

Moreover, the climate of relations between Israel and its US ally has been chilled by remarks last week from Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon saying Washington's foreign policy showed weakness in global hotspots.

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