New talks planned on Israeli West Bank pullback (Agencies) Updated: 2005-03-14 08:35
Israeli and Palestinian ministers will meet on Monday to resume deadlocked
talks over a promised Israeli handover of West Bank cities, officials said on
Sunday.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon also renewed a commitment under a
U.S.-backed peace plan to remove unauthorized Jewish settlement outposts from
occupied land, but suggested he would wait until after a planned Gaza pullout in
July.
Talks on the handover of West Bank cities broke down last week over an
Israeli demand to maintain a roadblock that Palestinians want dismantled outside
the town of Jericho.
![Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (L) and the U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan shake hands during their meeting in Jerusalem, March 13, 2005. Israel's cabinet adopted on Sunday a report charting state complicity in the building of dozens of unauthorized settler outposts in the West Bank but set no timetable for their removal under a U.S.-backed peace plan. [Reuters]](xin_59030214083721807501.jpg) Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (L) and
the U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan shake hands during their meeting in
Jerusalem, March 13, 2005. Israel's cabinet adopted on Sunday a report
charting state complicity in the building of dozens of unauthorized
settler outposts in the West Bank but set no timetable for their removal
under a U.S.-backed peace plan. [Reuters] | But a
senior Palestinian official said new talks were scheduled for Monday
between Palestinian Interior Minister Nasser Youssef and Israeli Defense
Minister Shaul Mofaz.
Israeli defense ministry officials confirmed that Mofaz would meet Youssef on
Monday evening. Separate talks were to be held on freeing Palestinian prisoners
held by Israel, the Palestinian official said.
Sharon and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas declared a ceasefire at a Feb.
8 peace summit, but Israel delayed implementing promises to withdraw from five
West Bank cities and free 900 prisoners after a suicide bomb attack two weeks
later.
![A group of Palestinian workers working in Israel, wait to enter the Gaza Strip through the Erez border crossing Sunday March 13, 2005. Israel on Sunday permitted 1,400 more Palestinians to enter Israel, part of a gradual easing of restrictions after last month's Mideast summit. The entry permits were issued to 900 Palestinian merchants and business people from the West Bank and 500 from the Gaza Strip, bringing the total of Palestinians allowed to work in Israel to 9,800. [AP]](xin_420302140839812243442.jpg) A group of Palestinian workers working in
Israel, wait to enter the Gaza Strip through the Erez border crossing
Sunday March 13, 2005. Israel on Sunday permitted 1,400 more Palestinians
to enter Israel, part of a gradual easing of restrictions after last
month's Mideast summit. The entry permits were issued to 900 Palestinian
merchants and business people from the West Bank and 500 from the Gaza
Strip, bringing the total of Palestinians allowed to work in Israel to
9,800. [AP] | Israel's cabinet also adopted a
report on Sunday commissioned by Sharon that alleged state complicity in the
building of scores of illegal outposts in the West Bank.
Ministers set no timetable for their removal required by a "road map" peace
plan backed by Washington, the U.N., Europe and Russia. A ministerial committee
was to examine the report's findings and report back to the cabinet in 90 days.
Sharon told United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, making his first
visit in more than four years, he would dismantle the outposts.
But he said "this would be difficult to do today because of preparations
underway" for a separate plan to remove 21 Jewish settlements from Gaza and the
northern West Bank this summer.
Israel had announced the Gaza pullout unilaterally last year, but later
pledged to negotiate a separate troop withdrawal from some West Bank cities
after peace moves began with Abbas.
Annan was due on Monday to meet Abbas, whose election in January to succeed
Yasser Arafat has raised hopes for renewed peacemaking after more than four
years of conflict.
Abbas, in his first interview with Israeli television since being elected
president, pledged he would seek to ensure a safe Israeli withdrawal from Gaza
this year.
"We want them to leave in peace ... " Abbas told Israel's state-owned Channel
One.
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