BBC Report
The Quartet of major powers mediating in the Middle East peace process is due to meet in London to tackle the crisis facing the Palestinians.
The talks - involving the US, UN, EU and Russia - will later involve representatives from donor states.
Gaza is struggling under a strict Israeli blockade, imposed against the militant group Hamas.
Ahead of the talks, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice implied Arab states could do more to help.
She said it was "extremely important" that states paid money they had pledged to ease the crisis facing the Palestinian Authority.
US officials pointed out that of $717m promised by Arab League members, only $153m of Arab pledges have been delivered, all from three countries: Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Algeria.
Ms Rice is going to have a three-way session with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni.
Window 'narrowing'
BBC diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall says there is a sense of urgency ahead of this London meeting, with one official warning that the Palestinian Authority is in danger of financial collapse.
Shortages of fuel and basic goods have created a stranglehold on the Gaza Strip's fragile economy since Israeli restrictions were imposed after Hamas seized control of the Strip last June.
US sponsored peace talks launched between Israel and the Palestinian Authority - controlled by Hamas's rival Fatah - last year, aiming for a two-state solution by the end of 2008, have produced little tangible progress.
En-route to London, Ms Rice warned that the "window for the two-state solution" would not be "forever open" and had become "narrower and narrower over time".
But she added: "I think it is far too early to start [having] any sense of despair about the end of the year."
Our correspondent says the modest ambition voiced by some for of Friday's talks is to get Arab nations to produce more cash to keep the Palestinian Authority afloat.
And, she adds, overall the point of this high level gathering it seems is not to force any breakthrough, but simply to keep all sides engaged and make sure that the faltering peace process stays alive.
Ahead of the talks, British aid agencies warned that ordinary life in Gaza was becoming "intolerable".
"Only a trickle of medicine, food, fuel and other goods is being allowed in," warned a statement from agencies including Oxfam and Christian Aid.
"It has made people highly dependent on food aid, and brought the health system and basic services such as water and sanitation near to collapse."
'Losing hope'
Speaking before a weekend of shuttle talks with negotiators in Jerusalem and the West Bank, Ms Rice warned that the expansion of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank did not mean the houses would remain under Israeli control in a final-settlement deal.
"I do not, and the US government does not, accept that anything done prior to agreement can ... present a fait accompli or determine the final outcome of this," she said.
Ms Rice added that determining final-status borders was "the best thing we can possibly do".
Before she left Washington, the most senior US diplomat said young Palestinians were losing hope of an agreement with Israel.
She told an American Jewish audience Israel needed to make "difficult decisions" to provide the Palestinians with the dignity of statehood.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7379328.stm
Comment: I posted this BBC story to demonstrate how futile the current sets of behaviors are as displayed by Ms. Rice (USA political strategy), Western leadership and the Hamas and Fatah leadership. First, as long as the entire Western community allows the Palestinians to play the victim, nothing will change in their behavior. Second, even though, on this site/blog, I have posted stories as recent as yesterday explaining who is at fault in the current "crisis", the truth is ignored by Western leaders. Hamas and Fatah know this, thus the ongoing creation of self-inflicted "tragedy". They know that they will not be held accountable. Third, this repetitive ruse allows Western countries to sink more monies into a gaping "sink hole" of misappropriation of funds. Fourth, no screaming today by leaders re: financial accountability.program development/services and goods delivered-we certainly did so when Arafat was in power. But now-no! Fifth, there is no "the answer" to this 60 year situation. There are answers and they are not in the mold of yesterday and today's actions. Rather, an entire new paradigm must be established and it begins with Western leadership. Current behavior cannot be tolerated nor should it be rewarded. Sixth, this post demonstrates how the media clings to its agenda, serves as the PR relations proxy for the Palestinians and without a doubt serves as an enabler of poor behavior and thus disables an entire society of people.
No comments:
Post a Comment