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Rightwingers seeking to derail peace: Israel negotiator
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Dec 12, 2013


Arab ministers to discuss Israel-Palestinian talks
Cairo (AFP) Dec 12, 2013 - Arab foreign ministers are to meet in Cairo on December 21 to discuss troubled peace talks between the Palestinians and Israel, the Arab League said on Thursday.

The announcement came as US Secretary of State John Kerry was headed to Israel and the West Bank on his ninth visit since he took office in January in his dogged quest for an elusive peace deal.

The Arab foreign ministers' meeting has been called at the request of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, League deputy secretary general Ahmed Ben Helli said.

Abbas may himself brief the ministers on the status of the talks, Ben Helli added.

At US urging, the negotiations have been held under tight wraps since their relaunch in July after a three-year hiatus.

But despite initial optimism, hopes of progress have rapidly faded amid mounting Palestinian exasperation at Israel's persistent drive to expand its settlements in the occupied West Bank even as the talks are under way.

The Palestinians have also voiced strong opposition to some of the ideas floated by Washington in a bid to keep the talks alive.

Palestine Liberation Organisation official Yasser Abed Rabbo said on Monday that Kerry's ideas on future security arrangements, which were presented to the Palestinian leadership last week, had provoked a "real crisis".

But Kerry insisted before leaving Washington for his latest visit that neither he nor President Barack Obama accepted the growing pessimism about the chances of a deal.

"President Obama and I reject that cynicism," Foreign Policy magazine quoted him as saying at an event it organised late on Wednesday.

Israel's chief peace negotiator on Thursday accused a key coalition partner of deliberately seeking to sabotage talks with the Palestinians by ramping up settlement construction.

Speaking just hours before the arrival of US Secretary of State John Kerry on his second visit within a week, Justice Minister Tzipi Livni accused the far-right national religious Jewish Home of deliberately promoting settlement projects in a bid "to derail" the ongoing negotiations.

"More building, more announcements of building in isolated settlements are meant to prevent us reaching peace," she told an audience at Tel Aviv University in remarks broadcast Thursday on public radio.

"That is their deliberate intention, to derail the negotiations. To cause the other side to walk out of the room," she said.

Jewish Home controls the housing ministry, giving it a key role in promoting Israeli construction on land the Palestinians want for a future state.

"When one speaks of the Jewish Home's veto power in the government, everyone is concerned with its veto on issues of religion and state," said Livni, whose centrist HaTnuah party is also part of the coalition.

"They have another veto -- with more (settlement) building, they place a veto on peace. They must not be allowed to use this informal veto, this illegitimate veto," she said.

Kerry is due to arrive in the evening for another round of shuttle diplomacy aimed at driving forward the peace talks, which have been brought to the brink of collapse by a series of major settlement announcements, enraging the Palestinians.

Deputy Foreign Minister Zeev Elkin, of the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu, said the talks would go nowhere as long as the Palestinians refused to recognise Israel as a Jewish state and to accept an Israeli military presence along the eastern edge of their future homeland, bordering Jordan.

"So far the Palestinians say 'no' to everything; so Kerry can come here many more times but... I don't think anything is going to change," he told public radio.

During the trip, Kerry will meet Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres in Jerusalem and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in Ramallah before heading to Jordan on Friday from where he will continue on to Asia.

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