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Flurry of diplomacy for Mideast peace conference
Israel News.Net Monday 10th September, 2007 (IANS)
Amman, Sep 10 (Xinhua) In the latest diplomatic activity aimed at facilitating the US-proposed Middle East peace process, Jordan's King Abdullah II has met visiting international Quartet envoy Tony Blair.
Abdullah told Blair Sunday that the upcoming peace conference should tackle various outstanding issues between the Palestinians and Israel, especially those pertaining to the final status including Jerusalem, the Palestinian borders and the refugees.
'To ensure the success of the peace conference, all parties concerned should work seriously in the coming few weeks to ensure that the meeting comes up with positive results in establishing an independent state on all Palestinian territories,' said Abdullah.
The king suggested that the conference, slated for November, should lay out a working plan with a 'specific timetable.' He also urged the Palestinians and Israel to resume final status negotiations over those thorny issues such as the Palestinian borders and Jerusalem.
Blair is on a two-week-long regional tour in the Middle East, which had already taken him to Egypt, Israel and the Palestinian territories.
Blair is expected to report the outcome of his ongoing visit to the international Quartet, which groups the UN, the EU, the US and Russia, during its upcoming meeting slated for Sep 23 in New York.
On July 16, US President George W. Bush proposed to hold an international conference this autumn, which would bring together Israel, the Palestinians and some neighbouring Arab states, to help resume the stalled Middle East peace talks.
In one of the first diplomatic activities to prepare for the upcoming conference, the two major players, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, met in Jerusalem on Aug 28.
The Israeli side said Olmert-Abbas meeting was 'very constructive' and the two spoke about 'fundamental issues that were necessary to bring about the establishment of two states for people'. The Palestinian side claimed that the meeting was 'serious and in-depth.'
Early this month, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana met both Abbas and Olmert and stressed that the coming months would see 'intense' peacemaking efforts.
Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema and Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer also paid a visit to the region. Early this month, Abdullah also toured France, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates in his party's efforts to energise the peace process.
With their intense diplomatic efforts, Arab diplomats and politicians seemed to embrace Bush's proposal and consider the upcoming conference a good opportunity to resume Palestinian-Israeli peace talks, which was at a deadlock since 2000.
But the US-proposed conference is still facing many questions such as the agenda, real goal, the role of Syria and internal Palestinian political crisis, among others. Many Arabs were doubtful over any significant achievement of the conference.
During a regular Arab League (AL) meeting held last Wednesday in Cairo, some of the Arab parties said the US initiative must be dealt with cautiously.
'Arabs should not be surprised that the real aim may be increasing normalisation with Israel without a real breakthrough for the Palestinians,' said an Arab diplomat on condition of anonymity.
AL Secretary General Amr Moussa said that if the conference failed, it would pose a threat to Arab interests and regional stability.
'A meeting, convened as a political demonstration without producing real substance, will not only be useless, but also will be harmful to Arab interests and the regional situation,' Moussa said.
The AL chief said a serious peace conference requires the attendance of all Arab states directly concerned, apparently referring to Syria, which has not been invited so far.
Abbas also had much concern. He said late August that the planned conference 'lacks clarity' and it could fail if no clarification for a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was devised.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a veteran politician on the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, warned that if the conference failed to produce a breakthrough, the negative repercussions would affect the whole region, increase feelings of frustration and strengthen extremism.
'This peace conference is an opportunity that should not be lost,' said Mubarak. 'Further political efforts have to be exerted to coordinate the stance of Arab and Western countries in a bid to secure the Mideast peace conference a success.'
A clear frame, agenda and timetable should be clarified to ease the doubts about the significance of the conference, said Mubarak.
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