January 24,
2011
Editor's Note:
Aljazeera TV released
documents about Palestinian-Israeli negotiations in 2008-2010. The
documents can be accessed at the following url:
http://transparency.aljazeera.net/en/search_arabic
Hamas: Al-Jazeera's papers unveiled plans to liquidate the
Palestinian cause
[ 24/01/2011 - 11:24 AM ]
GAZA, (PIC)--
The Hamas Movement said that the confidential documents leaked
by Al-Jazeera satellite channel, about the peace talks between the
Fat'h-controlled Palestinian authority (PA) and the Israeli occupation
government, represent a very serious poof of the PA's involvement in
attempts to liquidate the Palestinian cause.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri told the Palestinian information
center (PIC) that these documents revealed the PA's attempts to
undermine the Palestinian people's rights, especially the right of
return and the holy city as well as its cooperation with Israel against
the Palestinian resistance and its involvement in the blockade and the
last war on Gaza.
"We consider these documents are further evidence of the security and
political decadence which the PA stooped to," spokesman Abu Zuhri
underscored.
For his part, Abdulsatter Qassem, a noted professor of political
science in Nablus city, said that the documents which were disclosed by
Al-Jazeera satellite channel about the process of negotiation between
the PA and Israel and the consequent serious concessions made by the PA
were known by many circles inside and outside Palestine.
Qassem in a statement to the PIC said that the PA negotiator was
never honest with its people. "The whole issue should be returned to its
root. Look for the origin of the negotiator, where he came from, how
they came and on what ground he was standing?"
The professor pointed out that any Arab peace talks with Israel are
always based on the protection of its security and any Arab party
refusing to accept that would not be allowed by Israel to take part in
these talks.
Al-Jazeera channel on Sunday started to unveil 1, 600 documents about
the PA-Israeli talks, the first part of them showed considerable
generous concessions made by the PA negotiation team without getting
anything in return, especially with regard to the issues of Jerusalem,
refugees, borders and security.
The channel initially presented documents related to the concessions
made by the PA regarding the issue of Jerusalem and will show gradually
in the coming days other documents related to the security cooperation
with Israel, Gaza war and Goldstone report.
Among the documents are maps for the proposed Palestinian state
prepared by PA negotiators.
In a meeting on the fourth of May 2008, the PA delegation headed by
chief negotiator Ahmed Qurei gave their Israeli counterparts these maps,
together with Qurei's confirmation that there was a common interest in
retaining some of the Israeli settlements in Jerusalem and the West
Bank.
According to figures mentioned in these maps, the rate of land swap
between the two sides in south Jerusalem was one percent for the
Palestinians and 50 percent for Israelis.
The maps also illustrates that the PA offered to concede all of east
Jerusalem as a historic concession for Israel in return for getting
lands in places other than the holy city.
According to the leaked documents, PA negotiators privately discussed
with Americans and Israelis in different meetings in 2008 and 2009 the
possibility of giving Israel what they called the biggest Yerushalayim
in history and giving up part of the flashpoint Arab neighborhood of
Sheikh Jarrah.
Newly Leaked Documents Show a Weakened PA Willing to Give up
East Jerusalem
Monday January 24, 2011 16:24 by Ramona M. - IMEMC and Agencies
Documents reveal PA made series of concessions to the Israeli
occupation government negotiators; East Jerusalem was offered and
rejected since it didn't include settlements in West Bank.
Palestinian negotiators secretly agreed to concede almost all Jewish
areas of East Jerusalem to Israel, the Guardian newspaper and Al-Jazeera
TV reported on Saturday. Some 1,600 Palestinian documents on peace talks
with Israel, obtained by Al Jazeera TV and given to the Guardian,
provide a glimpse into the breakdown of the peace process.
The
biggest revelation from the documents is that Palestinian negotiators
secretly agreed to accept Israel's annexation of all but one of the
neighborhoods, Har Homa, built in East Jerusalem.
In an effort to
move closer to independent statehood, this was one in a series of
concessions made to Israel by Palestinian negotiators. The documents
present the Palestinian Authority as weakened and desperate because of
lack of progress in talks and the growing strength of Hamas.
Israeli negotiators come across in the minutes as confident while U.S.
politicians seem dismissive toward Palestinian representatives,
according to the Guardian.
The PA leadership may have difficulty
justifying the revelations to a public not ready to offer the same
concessions. The documents also mention other controversial issues such
as the right of return of Palestinian refugees, the close cooperation
between Israel and Palestinian Authority Security forces, land swaps in
East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and of Israeli warnings to the PA of
the invasion of the Gaza Strip in 2008-09.
Al-Jazeera TV reported
that the Palestinian Authority offered Israel all settlements in
Jerusalem except Har Homa on June 15, 2008.
Saeb Erekat, the
chief Palestinian negotiator, also proposed in an October 2009 meeting
that Jerusalem's Old City be divided, ceding Israel control over the
Jewish Quarter and part of the Armenian Quarter.
Other documents
revealed a Palestinian agreement to the return of only 100,000
Palestinian refugees into Israel, and that Erekat agreed to the Israeli
demand of recognizing Israel as a Jewish state.
The documents
also reveal that the Palestinian negotiators, in an effort to move
forward on the sensitive issue of the holy sites in the Old City of
Jerusalem, proposed a joint committee to administer the Temple Mount.
The offers were made in 2008, at the Annapolis conference, and were
favored by chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat. He mentioned it was
giving Israel "the biggest Yerushalayim [the Hebrew name for Jerusalem]
in history."
Israeli leaders, backed by the U.S. government, said
the offers were inadequate. The offer was rejected Israel because it did
not include Ma'aleh Adumim, as well as Har Homa and Ariel, which are
settlements located in the West Bank.
The leaked documents
include extensive verbatim transcripts of private meetings. Many were
independently verified by the Guardian and corroborated by former
participants in the talks and intelligence and diplomatic sources, the
newspaper reported.
Abed Rabbo blasts Emir of Qatar
Published today (updated) 24/01/2011 14:33 RAMALLAH (Ma’an) --
PLO executive committee member Yasser Abed Rabbo on Monday blasted
the Emir of Qatar over documents leaked by the Doha-based Al-Jazeera TV
network covering a decade of Israel-Palestinian negotiations.
According to documents released Sunday, chief PLO negotiator Saeb Erakat
offered Israel huge concessions, including "the biggest Yerushalayim
[Jerusalem] in history" during 2008 negotiations.
The documents,
dubbed the Palestine Papers, reveal details of the Palestinian
Authority's security cooperation with Israel and PLO offers of
compromises on refugees' right to return, according to Al-Jazeera's
website.
In a press conference in Ramallah,
Abed Rabbo said Al-Jazeera's release of the
documents was a political campaign directed by Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa
al-Thani.
"We thank the Emir of
Qatar for giving Al-Jazeera the green light to start this campaign,
because it can't be the responsibility of [Al-Jazeera director general]
Wadah Khanfar alone."
Further, he suggested that the Qatari royal
should extend the climate of transparency to his own state and reveal
the role of the US military base in Qatar in spying on neighboring state
and his true relations with Iran and Israel.
PLO official
attacks Al-Jazeera
Abed Rabbo accused Al-Jazeera of falsifying
the documents, changing the text and adding pictures of people who were
not involved with talks.
Further, he complained that the channel
worked on the Palestine Papers for two months without seeking the
Palestinian point of view.
Continuing his attack on the network,
he said Al-Jazeera was trying to imitate the whistle-blowing site
WikiLeaks after a failed attempt to buy it.
The PLO official
condemned the timing of the release, and said it coincided with a
campaign by the Israeli government against President Mahmoud Abbas.
He accused the news network of carrying out a similar campaign
against late President Yasser Arafat.
The documents were leaked
by a junior member of the Palestinian negotiations department, Abed
Rabbo said. He called for an independent committee to be formed to study
the authenticity of the papers.
Responding to a journalist's
question, he said the Palestinian Authority would not target
Al-Jazeera's West Bank offices or pursue the network's correspondents.
Abed-Rabbo's reaction was echoed by PLO chief Saeb Erakat.
"We don't have anything to hide," Erakat told AFP by telephone from
Cairo on Monday, insisting the revelations had been "taken out of
context and contain lies."
"Al-Jazeera's information is full of
distortions and fraud," he said.
Abbas: Arab leaders knew our
position
Abbas, who is currently in the Egyptian capital for
talks with senior officials, insisted that the PA had shared every
development in the peace process with the Arab world's leadership.
"With everything we have done -- in terms of activities with the
Israelis or the Americans -- we have given the Arabs details," the
president said in remarks published by official PA news agency Wafa.
"I don't know where Al-Jazeera got these secret things from, and
there is nothing hidden from the Arab brothers," he added, adding that
Arab nations were kept up to date through the 22-member Arab League
based in Cairo.
The leaks prompted a furious response from Gaza's
Hamas government leaders, who have long decried peace talks with Israel.
Its spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said they showed the PA's "ugly face" and
"level of its cooperation with the occupation."
Washington said
it was reviewing the documents, with State Department spokesman Philip
Crowley saying: "We cannot vouch for their veracity" in a Twitter post.
The remaining papers are to be revealed by Al-Jazeera and the
Guardian in daily stages. They reveal "the unyielding confidence of
Israeli negotiators," according to the Guardian.
The leaked
documents were "drawn up by PA officials and lawyers working for the
British-funded PLO negotiations support unit and include extensive
verbatim transcripts of private meetings," it said.
Many of them
had been "independently authenticated by the Guardian and corroborated
by former participants in the talks and intelligence and diplomatic
sources."
AFP contributed to this report
`What more can I give?` Asks Erekat
Published yesterday (updated) 24/01/2011 14:21
DUBAI (AFP) -
Palestinian negotiators offered in 2008 to cede vast swathes of
annexed East Jerusalem in peace talks with Israel, Al-Jazeera news
channel reported, citing "secret documents."
Chief Palestinian
negotiator Saeb Erakat, however, questioned on the Doha-based channel,
said the Palestinian leadership had "nothing to hide" and dismissed most
of the report as "a pack of lies."
Al-Jazeera said the Jerusalem
areas offered were where Jewish settlements have been built, including
French Hill, Ramat Alon and Gilo, as well as the Jewish Quarter and a
part of the Armenian Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City.
Israel, the
Arab satellite channel added, offered nothing in return for what it
called the "historic concession" from the Palestinians, in the documents
which Britain's The Guardian newspaper said it was also leaking.
Al-Jazeera said the concessions came at a June 2008 meeting in Jerusalem
between Condoleezza Rice, then US secretary of state, then Israeli
foreign minister Tzipi Livni and ex-Palestinian premier Ahmad Qrei'a,
and Erakat.
"This last proposition could help in the swap
process," Qorei is quoted as saying in the "Palestine Papers."
"We proposed that Israel annexes all settlements in Jerusalem except
Jabal Abu Ghneim [Har Homa]," he said in the documents, as cited by the
news channel.
"This is the first time in history that we make
such a proposition; we refused to do so in Camp David," he added,
referring to the US-hosted 2000 Camp David peace talks attended by late
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
But "the Israeli side refused
to even place Jerusalem on the agenda, let alone offer the PA
concessions in return for its historic offer," the report said.
Qrei'a told Livni at the June 2008 meeting, however, there would be no
concessions on Jewish settlements in the West Bank, according to the
Palestine Papers.
The report comes as world powers seek ways to
haul Israel and the Palestinians back to the negotiating table after
direct peace talks broke down last September in a dispute over Jewish
settlements.
The United States on Sunday said it was reviewing
the "alleged Palestinian documents."
"We cannot vouch for their
veracity," said State Department spokesman Philip Crowley in a Twitter
post.
The Palestinians refuse to resume negotiations while Israel
builds on land they want for a future state of their own.
In what
it termed "shocking revelations," Al-Jazeera said it had obtained more
than 1,600 internal confidential documents from a decade of US-brokered
peace negotiations.
They were to be disclosed in installments on
the channel and its website.
"We are offering you the biggest
Yerushalayim in Jewish history," chief negotiator Erakat is quoted as
telling Livni, using the Jewish name for the Holy City.
Erakat
also offered concessions on the status of Jerusalem's Temple Mount,
which houses the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest
site in Islam, according to the Palestine Papers.
On refugees, he
is said to have offered to accept the return of only 100,000 out of the
Palestinians who fled at the establishment of the state of Israel in
1948 and their descendants, now numbering almost five million.
But Erakat scoffed at the reports.
"We have not gone back on our
position. If we had given ground on the refugees and made such
concessions, why hasn't Israel agreed to sign a peace accord?" he asked.
Observers said the Al-Jazeera report revealed little new as details
of the land swap proposals had long been an open secret.
In
Britain, The Guardian said on its website that the cache of confidential
Palestinian documents obtained by Al-Jazeera was to be "shared
exclusively" with the daily.
The documents also show how PA
leaders had been "privately tipped off" about Israel's 2008-2009 war
against the Gaza Strip ruled by the Islamist movement Hamas, the paper
said.
"The overall impression... is of the weakness and growing
desperation of PA leaders as failure to reach agreement or even halt all
settlement temporarily undermines their credibility in relation to their
Hamas rivals."
The Guardian said "the papers also reveal the
unyielding confidence of Israeli negotiators."
The leaked
documents were "drawn up by PA officials and lawyers working for the
British-funded PLO negotiations support unit and include extensive
verbatim transcripts of private meetings," it said.
Many of them
had been "independently authenticated by The Guardian and corroborated
by former participants in the talks and intelligence and diplomatic
sources."