MIFTAH
Monday, 22 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

A joint meeting of the Palestinian and Israeli partners to the Geneva Initiative urged both the Palestinian and Israeli publics to support a negotiated settlement to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as opposed to the ideology of unilateralism that is being currently promoted by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

The steering committees of the two sides in the Geneva Initiative met Wednesday March 3, 2004 for some six hours in Al Ram area, halfway between Jerusalem and Ramallah, since neither side could enter the areas of the other. Palestinians could not get the appropriate permits to go to Israel. The Israelis are bound by military orders issued by the central command of the Israeli army barring their entry into the areas of the Palestinian National Authority.

In a joint statement released after the first part of the meeting which discussed mutual and joint political steps, the two sides said that any withdrawals by the Israeli army out of the Occupied Territories should be negotiated with the Palestinian National Authority and should be carried out within the context of the Road Map but not in part of a unilateral solution that the Israeli government is seemingly trying to impose on both sides.

"We call for an immediate effort to negotiate, coordinate and agree on all aspects related to the proposed withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Such a coordinated withdrawal will be a positive step towards reviving the Roadmap and reaching a future permanent status agreement. We call upon the international community, particularly the members of the Quartet, to act in this spirit," said the statement.

The two sides reiterated their position that the Geneva Accord is the best model that proves that an agreement is possible and that there are always partners to peace on both sides. "The only guarantee for ending the suffering of both peoples is an agreement along the model suggested in the Geneva Accord," said the statement.

The two sides expressed their opposition to the concept of erecting new walls to separate between Palestinians and Israelis who, by default, are partners to peace. But, they argued, if a wall is inevitable to provide a sense of security to the Israelis, then such a wall should exist along the 1967 borders and not inside the Occupied Territories.

"As we approach the Arab League Summit," said the statement, "We emphasize that the Geneva Initiative is compatible with the Saudi Peace Plan that was endorsed by the Arab summit meeting in Beirut in 2002. The Geneva Accord serves as proof that such a solution can indeed become a reality."

The Palestinian team to the meeting, headed by PLO Executive Committee member and head of the Palestinian Peace Coalition Yasser Abed Rabbo, included PLC member Qaddoura Fares, Radi Jarai', Ibrahim Khreisheh, Naim Al Ashhab, Tayseer Arouri, Abdul Qader Al Husseini (son of the late Faisal Husseini) and others. The Israeli team, headed by former minister of justice Yossi Beilin, included MKs Amnon Shahak, Amram Mitzna, Haim Oron, Avshalom Vilan and retired army brigadier general Yisraela Oron and others.

 
 
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