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Abbas Briefs Palestinian Americans in New York
About Negotiations and Unity Talks with Hamas
Abbas reassures Palestinian-Americans Published yesterday
(updated) 25/09/2010 12:14
NEW YORK (Ma'an) --
President Mahmoud Abbas met with Palestinian-Americans from across the 50
states on Thursday, for an hour-long meeting where he reasserted his
position on a resumption of settlement construction.
"I will say
this once in front of you, if they want negotiations, then they will
continue with settlement freeze otherwise the negotiations will stop, and we
are sorry to waste the opportunity," Abbas told assembled guests.
In
Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly told colleagues during
a series of phone calls seeking to find a solution to the settlement issue,
"if the Palestinians want peace, they will stay in the talks with us in
order to reach a framework agreement within one year."
Abbas,
speaking at the Egyptian Embassy in New York, made clear that he was
resolute on the issue, saying "we told the Americans and Israel that we will
not continue with the negotiations if the settlements were not frozen on our
ground, this is our condition; we had said it and we are saying it in each
bilateral meeting, in each group meeting."
Explaining the pressures
he faced, Abbas said that "the Israelis say to us: you negotiated with
Olmert while settlements were being built, why won't you talk now. And I say
to them, that is in the past, and we have never stopped demanding a
settlement halt. Enough is enough."
Laying out his negotiations
position, the president explained that he was negotiating for a Palestinian
state based on the 1967 borders. "We do not mind land swaps of similar value
in some instances," he said, adding that the prospect of international
forces from NATO or similar to the UNIFIL force operating in southern
Lebanon was agreeable to officials.
The forces, he added, must
simply not be Israeli, or even include one single Israeli whether from the
civilian population or the military.
"East Jerusalem is ours and
West Jerusalem is theirs. The city can and should be open to all religions,
but it must first be clear that this is our capital."
Asked what
would be done if talks failed, Abbas said it was not his decision to make.
"The PLO leadership, the National Council, Fatah and leaders of other
factions would have to decide what to do," he said.
Addressing
Palestinian-Americans
The Palestinian president addressed more than
100 Palestinians from as far west as California, telling a large contingent
from Chicago that he was sorry he could not travel to meet them following an
invitation to speak in Illinois. "You must please pardon me, I’m an elderly
man, I can’t travel all of these distances."
He promised, however,
that "the Palestinian leadership will work on that," and that he understood
"why you all came from such faraway places to attend this meeting; we must
continue these forums so we can exchange ideas, consult, check on your
situations and give you valued news of your homeland."
Abbas then
gave a sweeping update on negotiations from George Bush senior to the
present day. He said Palestinian officials had hoped for an even larger Arab
presence at the opening round of talks in Washington, but added that in the
end the United States had decided on the guest list.
Unity
Fatah continues to support the Egyptian unity document, Abbas said,
commenting on recent visits by party officials to Lebanon and Syria for
visits with top level Hamas leaders.
"The PA had agreed on it to
restore unity," he said of the document, adding that "we formed a national
unity government with Hamas and did not care that the world laid siege to us
on that account.
"They say the Abbas is under American pressure, but
I ratified the Egyptian proposal and I had formed with Hamas a unity
government. I transfer $121 million - 58 percent of the PA budget - monthly
to Gaza even after the coup, but Hamas does not care and does not understand
that 96 percent of the water in Gaza is polluted, that economic life has
been destroyed, and they have made the people there live off goods smuggled
in through tunnels."
When Hamas decides to ratify the unity
agreement, Abbas said, he will immediately form a unity government. The
first mission of that government would be bringing in some $4 billion
dollars in aid pledged to rebuild Gaza after former Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert launched the 2008-9 war on the coastal enclave.
The
second mandate of the unity government would be to go immediately to
presidential and parliamentary elections. "My term is over, their term is
over; elections must be held if we are to be honest."
Abbas said that
in comparison with Gaza, the West Bank was flourishing. "I do not claim that
there is full growth, but the conditions are different, life is improving,
there are theaters, restaurants, places open until dawn because people feel
safe. We do not lack independence, we are building the foundations of a
state that will be ready the moment we declare independence."
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