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In West Bank, EU's Barroso urges new peace talks
by Staff Writers
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) July 8, 2012


European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso called on Sunday for a return to Israeli-Palestinian talks, warning the peace process must not become "an orphan of the Arab Spring."

Barroso made the remarks during the first day of a trip to the West Bank, where he met Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

"The momentous change that we are witnessing throughout the Arab world should constitute an incitement and not a deterrent to the resumption of negotiations," he said after meeting Fayyad, according to an advance copy of his remarks.

"The Middle East peace process cannot become an orphan of the Arab Spring."

Direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians have been on hold since late September 2010, and efforts by the peacemaking Quartet -- which groups the EU, United Nations, United States and Russia -- have had little success.

Barroso urged continued peacemaking efforts and said it was "important that the two parties do not act in a way that undermines the viability of a two-state solution."

"In this respect it is with concern that we see the continuous growth of settlements in the West Bank, including east Jerusalem."

On Sunday evening, Barroso met with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas for talks that also focused on the peace process.

In comments to the press after the meeting, Abbas repeated Palestinian demands that Israel halt settlement activity and agree to base border negotiations on the lines that existed before the 1967 Six Day War.

He also called on Israel to release dozens of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails since before the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1994, reiterating that the release could lead to a "dialogue" that would fall short of negotiations.

"We know that we cannot reach a solution outside of the framework of negotiations," he said.

Barroso's talks with Fayyad and Abbas also touched on a burgeoning financial crisis that has left the Palestinian Authority that governs the West Bank unable to pay salaries.

Fayyad said Sunday that the current fiscal crunch "is serious, very serious. It's in the running for the worst financial crisis" faced by the PA.

The shortfall is the result of a gap between pledged and delivered donor funds, with Arab nations in particular failing to transfer promised money.

Abbas said he discussed the "difficult economic and financial situation" with Barroso, but stopped short of saying whether he had asked the EU to stump up additional funds.

Attempts by Abbas's Fatah movement and the rival Hamas group to reconcile were also on the agenda in Barroso's talks with both Palestinian officials.

The EU commission chief said after meeting Fayyad that the efforts were "a key factor contributing to the unity of a future Palestinian state and to reaching the two-state solution."

And he said that new elections, which are called for under the reconciliation deal signed last year but have been delayed, would constitute "a significant contribution to Palestinian state-building."

Fatah and Hamas officials have held several rounds of talks in Cairo and Doha since signing the reconciliation deal in a bid to chart a path to implementation.

But they have continued to disagree over the formation of an interim government and elections remain on hold, with Hamas last week announcing it was suspending voter registration by the Central Elections Commission.

Abbas said on Sunday that the suspension "cripples the reconciliation process that was agreed in Doha and Cairo."

Barroso is scheduled to meet on Monday with Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres.

Their talks are expected to focus on the peace process but also efforts to curb Iran's nuclear programme, which Israel says poses an existential threat to the Jewish state.

EU officials said Barroso will also discuss with both Israel and the Palestinians the ongoing violence in Syria, where an uprising has been met with brutal repression and where observers fear the unfolding of a protracted civil war.

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Israel's PM backs 'conscription for all' plan
Jerusalem (AFP) July 8, 2012 - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Sunday he will back a controversial plan to compel ultra-Orthodox Jews and Arab Israelis to complete compulsory military or community service.

The decision was an about-turn for Netanyahu, who just last week dissolved the panel whose recommendations he has now endorsed, after a key coalition partner threatened to withdraw from the government.

"We are citizens of one state, and must all share the burden of its service," he said at the opening of his weekly cabinet meeting, after the Likud party voted to endorse the findings of the so-called Plesner committee.

Netanyahu cautioned that moves to expand the national service of Arab Israelis and ultra-Orthodox Jews "must be executed gradually and in a way that will not cause a rift in the national unity."

"The new law to be proposed will be applied to everyone: secular, ultra-Orthodox Jews, Jews, Arabs -- everyone," he added.

Before the cabinet meeting, the Likud party voted unanimously to adopt the proposals that the committee head, Yohanan Plesner, made public last week despite Netanyahu's dissolution of the panel.

Netanyahu's government will now move towards drafting a law requiring all sectors of Israeli society to complete either military or community service, with penalties to be levied on those who fail to comply.

The Plesner panel also called for increased incentives and benefits for those who serve, as well as efforts to combat draft-dodging.

The new law will replace the so-called Tal Law, which contained national service exemptions for ultra-0rthodox Jews and Arab Israelis, but was overturned by Israel's High Court earlier this year.

Netanyahu's decision to endorse the Plesner committee's findings appeared to head off the possibility of a coalition crisis.

The Kadima party headed by Shaul Mofaz, which joined the government in May, giving Netanyahu a massive parliamentary majority, had threatened to quit the coalition over the issue of military service for all.

But after the Likud party decision, Netanyahu's office said the prime minister and Mofaz had agreed on the formation of a panel to draft the new law.

"Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and vice prime minister Shaul Mofaz are in agreement on the formation of a commission charged with drawing up a law on the equality of service to be presented at the next government meeting," it said.

Mofaz and deputy premier Moshe Yaalon will be part of the commission, as well as Plesner, a Kadima member of parliament.

Mofaz made no public statement following the decision and sources in his party were reserved in their reaction to an apparent political victory for the Kadima leader over Netanyahu.

"We are carefully considering it a step in the right direction," a Kadima official told AFP. "But ultimately, the real test will be in the legislation, which must uphold the principles of equal service to all and create a historic change."

The issue of expanding national service to all sectors of Israeli society has proved thorny for Netanyahu, whose coalition groups secular parties like Kadima and the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu as well as ultra-Orthodox parties opposed to compulsory service.

The issue has also resonated throughout Israeli society, with thousands of Israelis taking to the streets in Tel Aviv on Saturday night to call on the government to require all sectors of society to participate in national service.

Military service is compulsory for most Israelis over the age of 18, with men serving three years and women two.



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WAR REPORT
China joins Russia in staying away from Syria talks
Damascus (AFP) July 5, 2012
China joined Russia on Thursday in boycotting a meeting aimed at coordinating efforts to stop the bloodshed in Syria, where three senior army officers were among more than 150 people reported killed in 48 hours. Moscow confirmed that some Western countries had asked it to offer Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a haven in exile, saying it had dismissed the idea as a "joke." In Beijing, fo ... read more


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