Pakistan Today

Netanyahu letter on peace a non-starter: Palestinians

The formal response of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Palestinian grievances over frozen peace negotiations contains nothing that could revive the talks, Palestinian officials said on Sunday. Netanyahu’s reply on Saturday to a letter he received last month from Mahmoud Abbas rejected the Palestinian president’s demand to halt Jewish settlement building in occupied territories and repeated a call for an unconditional return to talks that collapsed in 2010, according to the officials. “The content of (Netanyahu’s) letter did not represent grounds for returning to negotiations,” Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization which reviewed the document, told Reuters. Israel did not release details of Netanyahu’s letter, which a senior aide carried to Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah. But Israeli officials said last week they did not expect Netanyahu to agree to Abbas’s demand to stop settlement construction before reopening any talks. After the right-wing Israeli premier’s letter was delivered, his office issued a joint statement with the Palestinians saying both sides were “committed to achieving peace”.
BROAD COALITION: Netanyahu stunned the political establishment on May 8 by hooking up with the main opposition group, the centrist Kadima party, to form one of the biggest coalitions in Israeli history. The head of Kadima, Shaul Mofaz, has long blamed Netanyahu for the failure of the peace talks and told reporters last week that entering new negotiations “was an iron condition for forming the unity government”. Yasser Abed Rabbo, who also belongs to the Palestinian Executive Committee, said the Israeli letter “did not include clear answers about the central issues which are undermining the resumption of the peace process”. Abed Rabbo cited the issues of settlements and Israel’s refusal to accept Palestinian demands for the creation of a Palestinian state, with minor territorial swaps, along the lines that existed before it captured the West Bank in a 1967 war.

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