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Abbas: Negotiations are the only route to a Palestinian state | ||
2009-08-18 | ||
![]() "We are peace seekers," he was quoted as telling the Ramallah meeting. "The main and the only path is the path of peace and negotiations. We don't have any other path and we do not wish to use any other path."
He added that Palestinian prisoners must be released before a final agreement with Israel can be signed. Earlier Prime Minister Salam Fayyad handed over to President Mahmoud Abbas the 13th Palestinian government's agenda. Titled, "Palestine: Ending Occupation - Establishing the State," the agenda included the basis for establishing Palestinian rule on the 1967 borders, and within the next two years. The charter spells out government priorities in several fields, including assessments on the performance of each of the Palestinian Authority's ministries and institutions, with a focus on good governance and efficient management. The political program also spells out future steps following the establishment of a Palestinian state and the end of the Israeli occupation.
The president also said Fatah's successful convention in Bethlehem ought to be repeated within the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and pointed out that the Palestinian National Council would soon convene to rebuild the PLO's Executive Committee. "We have seen some hard times, but the Fatah congress achieved more than I ever dreamed of. However, we are not here for Fatah only, but for the Palestinian people at large," Abbas said, adding that other PLO factions were equally concerned about Fatah. Meanwhile, Abbas denied that the scheduled PNC meeting, scheduled for 26-27 August, would interfere with the ongoing national unity dialogue with Hamas, which was to end on 25 August, according to the latest deadline set by Cairo. Additionally, Abbas said peace negotiations would continue the moment Israel announced a freeze in settlement activities. "Our stance has not changed," he said. "We have six points on our agenda related to the final status, and we are ready to discuss these points with the current Israeli government at once, just as we did with its predecessor - if it chooses to freeze settlement activities." | ||
Posted by:Fred |