Peace draft rift drags on
Write:
Austen [2011-05-20]
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are deeply divided over the content of a joint document they are drafting for next month's US-sponsored statehood conference, Palestinian officials said yesterday.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, both weakened by internal crises, have avoided formal discussion of agenda issues in a series of pre-conference summits. They appointed top aides to find common ground instead.
The teams, which were introduced last week, are expected to begin negotiations today but their opening positions diverge dramatically, reflecting disputes between Olmert and Abbas on how to revive moribund peace talks, Palestinian officials said.
"We can say, ahead of the real discussions beginning between the negotiators, that there is no agreement on any issue yet," chief Palestinian negotiator Ahmed Qurie said.
A senior Abbas adviser involved in the talks said that the Palestinian president and Olmert "each gave his team different instructions about what type of document to work on".
The Palestinians want the joint document to address future borders and the fate of millions of their refugees and of Jerusalem - "final-status" issues that Israel has long evaded, demanding the Palestinians first provide security guarantees.
But the sides have agreed that formal talks on Palestinian statehood will not begin until after the conference, which is expected in mid-to-late November in the Washington area. Until then, Israel wants to avoid a detailed discussion.
"The joint statement will address core issues. In a general way, it will show the points of accord that we hope will be the basis of negotiations in the future," Olmert spokeswoman Miri Eisin said.
Briefing his Cabinet ahead of its weekly meeting yesterday, Olmert described unspecified "diplomatic moves" with the Palestinians as "inevitable" and said he would work towards achieving Israeli consensus for their implementation.
Olmert further invoked the "roadmap", a US-backed peace plan from 2003. "Anything to do with implementing a (two-state) solution is predicated on making good on the roadmap, not just in terms of content but also of sequence," Olmert said in broadcast remarks.