Friday, February 08, 2008

PAL PM NO 08 ISRAEL ACCORD

Palestinian PM sees no '08 Israel accord By Ed Stoddard
FEB 07,08


AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad said on Thursday a lasting peace accord with Israel was unlikely in 2008 despite renewed diplomatic efforts to resolve the long-running conflict. In an interview with Reuters in the Texas capital, Austin, where he is on a private visit, he highlighted the lack of progress on the issue of Israeli settlements and military incursions into the West Bank as among the chief obstacles in the road map to peace and Palestinian statehood.I do not believe though that the final resolution ... will be complete in the course of this year. I don't think that is likely, Fayyad said.On a trip to the Middle East last month, U.S. President George W. Bush said he believed a peace treaty between Israel and the Palestinians would be signed before he leaves office in January 2009.The U.S. government will assess and judge whether Israel and the Palestinians are meeting their obligations under the 2003 road map as part of a push for a Palestinian statehood agreement before Bush leaves office.In the interview, Fayyad said: The short-term track is not moving as well as it needs to for the political process, for negotiations. In particular, the lack of an adequately firm commitment with regard to (Israeli) settlements, he said.Israel has yet to fulfill its road map commitments to halt Jewish settlement activity and to uproot outposts built without government permission in the occupied West Bank.Israeli officials have said Palestinians have a long way to go to meet their security obligations under the road map.Fayyad repeated his government's criticism of Israeli military incursions into West Bank towns like Nablus in pursuit of Palestinian militants, saying such actions undermined its own efforts to impose law and order.

Our efforts are undermined, our credibility is undermined particularly in areas where we have made progress, he said. Palestinian forces last year began executing a plan devised by Fayyad's Western-backed government to crack down on armed militias.
Israel fears any West Bank areas it hands over to the Palestinians could, like the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, be used by militants as launching points for rocket attacks on Israeli towns. International Middle East envoy Tony Blair said on Thursday that Palestinian security forces had significantly improved and were starting to carry out their part in a long-stalled road map peace plan.Fayyad said militias linked to the militant Palestinian group Hamas and others were also not helping matters for his embattled government.Asked if his government wanted them to disarm, he said: Yes, of course. All militias. Hamas and everyone else.(Editing by Peter Cooney)

Israel shocks boars to stop false alarms FEB 07,08

JERUSALEM - Israel's military is using electric shocks to keep wild boars from setting off false alarms at its supersensitive electronic fence along the border with Lebanon, according to an army publication. The animals, common in northern Israel and southern Lebanon, often bump into the fence, setting off alarms of a possible infiltration by Lebanese guerrillas and dispatching soldiers to check for a breach, the soldiers' weekly Bamahaneh reported in its current issue.So soldiers strung barbed wire hooked up to a power generator along the fence. Animals touching the charged wire get a small electric shock — harmless but irritating.
We believe that after wild boars, or any other animals running around here, get an electric shock once, they won't come back, Lt. Col. Ofer Azrad, an officer in the border area, told the magazine.
Most details about the border fence are kept secret.

Israel should not worsen Gaza humanitarian crisis: US Thu Feb 7, 6:38 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The United States on Thursday urged Israel not to aggravate the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, where the Jewish state has scaled down its energy supply as it pursues rocket launchers in the territory. We understand Israel's right to defend itself but we do not think that action should be taken that would infringe upon or worsen the humanitarian situation for the civilian population in Gaza, said State Department spokesman Tom Casey.I am sure we will continue to convey that position to them.

Israel on Thursday began reducing by around one percent the electricity it supplies to Gaza via high-tension power lines. Speaking in Israel, Defense Minister Ehud Barak vowed that if the rocket fire from Gaza continues, we will intensify our operations and strikes against the other side, until a solution is found.
Israel has kept Gaza under effective lockdown since June 2007 following the territory's takeover by the Islamist movement Hamas.
Last month, Israel tightened its long-running blockade on Gaza, which was crippled by a sharp drop in fuel and electrical supplies, but the blockade was eased several days later after an intervention by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice with Israeli authorities.