Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have until the Democratic and Republican presidential conventions next summer to complete peace talks, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said Thursday. Last update - 17:22 18/10/2007Erekat: Palestinians want accord by start of U.S. presidential raceBy DPAIsraeli and Palestinian negotiators have until the Democratic and Republican presidential conventions next summer to complete peace talks, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said Thursday.President George W. Bush will be preoccupied with the presidential race after the conventions, Erekat told a news conference in Ramallah. "The Republican and Democratic parties will start their conventions for the presidency in August and therefore we have to conclude an agreement by then.""We have a timeline, whether Israel likes it or not," he said.Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas sees the negotiations with Israel in three stages, he said.
The first stage begins now, he said, the period before the peace summit scheduled for next month in Annapolis, Maryland. The second stage would be the negotiations on a peace deal, and the final phase would be the implementation of the treaty."We have to reach a joint document, and not a peace treaty, on the core issues with specific parameters for solving these issues before convening the conference," Erekat said."We have not yet started even writing one word," he added. "We exchanged views but I cannot say that we have even started to discuss details," he added.He denied the meeting has been postponed, saying that no invitations to it have yet been issued, and therefore "it is too early to talk about going or not going without an invitation or when or where the meeting is going to take place."
He also denied reports that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has placed any conditions on the Palestinians in order to reach a common document with Israel or that she has failed in her recent mission to the Middle East, which ended Wednesday night."I am surprised to hear these conclusions regarding the visit," he said, explaining that "responsibility for reaching a document is a joint Palestinian-Israeli responsibility.""I cannot say there is an agreement and do not deny the fact that there is disparity" with Israel, he went on. "I cannot say that we have started to discuss the core issues or say that Rice has started to bridge the gap." Qureia: There is no crisis in talks with IsraelFormer Palestinian prime minister Ahmed Qureia, the chief negotiator leading the current talks ,on Thursday dismissed claims that peace momentum has stalled, saying Israel and the Palestinians still have their sights set on framing a shared vision of peace."
There is no crisis at all, said Ahmed Qureia, playing down Palestinian accusations that Israel has been undermining preparations for the upcoming U.S.-brokered peace summit."Qureia spoke a day after Rice wrapped up a four-day visit to the region meant to lay the groundwork for the conference. Throughout Rice's visit, which ended Thursday morning, Palestinian officials, including Abbas, accused Israel of being intransigent and damaging the pre-summit atmosphere.But on Thursday, Qureia said he remained hopeful a deal would be reached, though he acknowledged much work lay ahead."We are still preparing for intensified negotiations that will take place before the conference in order to reach a joint document," he told The Associated Press. So far, we haven't discussed any issues.
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