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Obama upbeat on Israel settlements

Posted by Staff Admin on Aug 18th, 2009 and filed under Headlines. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

2009818181537217580_5US President Barack Obama has said that there has been “movement in the right direction” on Israel’s policy of building settlements on occupied Palestinian land, following talks with Egypt’s president.

“My hope is that we are going to see, not just movement from the Israelis, but also from the Palestinians on incitement and security but also from Arab states that show their willingness to engage Israel,” he said in a joint press conference with Mubarak at the White House on Tuesday.

Mubarak echoed Obama’s statement that efforts to kick-start Palestinian-Israeli peace negotiations were advancing, but said that direct negotiations must begin before Arab states can take a more active role in supporting the peace process.

“We need to move to the final status solution and level,” Mubarak told reporters as he sat with Obama in the Oval Office.

“I have contacted the Israelis and they said ‘perhaps we can talk about a temporary solution’. But I told them ‘no’; I told them, ‘forget about the temporary solution, forget about temporary borders’,” he said, in reference to the formation of a future Palestinian state.

Rosiland Jordan, Al Jazeera’s correspondent in Washington, said: “There is going to be a series of baby steps now, to try to get both sides [the Palestinians and Israel] back to the table and negotiate in good faith.

“What we did not hear from Mubarak was a firm commitment to persaude other Arab nations back into the sphere of trying to work with the Palestinian community but also to show goodwill towards the Israelis. That would have been a notweworthy development had it come about.”

Settlement activity

Obama’s statement on Israeli settlement expansion, which Washington has criticised, came after an Israeli newspaper reported that no tenders have been issued for new housing settlement projects since Benjamin Netanyahu became Israel’s prime minister in March, citing unnamed Israeli officials.

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Kobi Bleich, a spokesman for Ariel Atias, the Israeli housing minister, refused to confirm or deny the Haaretz report.Peace Now, an Israeli human right group, agreed with the reports in Haaretz, but said that the Israeli government was allowing 1,000 housing units that are already under construction in the occupied West Bank to continue.

The meeting between Obama and Mubarak came as the US government continues its push towards peace between Israel and its Arab neighbours.

The US has in the past urged Arab states that do not have normal ties with Israel to make incremental steps to recognise it.The Obama administration has suggested that Arab states could grant permission for Israeli civilian aircraft to fly over their territory, as well as allow Israel to open interest sections in foreign embassies in Arab capitals.

Saudi Arabia has led opposition to the strategy, saying that Israel must commit to an Arab peace initiative which promises a full normalisation in Arab-Israeli relations in exchange for measures which would see the formation of a viable Palestinian state and the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their ancestral lands.

Obama praised

Although Mubarak has now met Obama for the third time in as many months, he was making his first visit to the United States since 2004.

The visit to Washington marks a further thaw in relations between the US and Egypt after former US President George Bush had criticised Cairo’s human rights record.

Mubarak on Tuesday praised Obama’s keynote speech in Cairo in June, in which the US president pledged “a new beginning” in relations between the Islamic world and the US.

“He came to give his address, it was a very strong address and it removed all doubts about the United States and the Muslim world,” Mubarak said after meeting Obama.

“The importance of the Cairo visit was very appreciated by the Muslim Islamic world because the Islamic world had thoughts that the US was against Islam … But his great, fantastic address there has removed all those doubts.”

Souce: Aljazeera

August 18th, 2009


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