- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, …
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu charged Monday that the Palestinians
have no interest in restarting peace negotiations, suggesting that
newly resumed contacts between the sides are producing little progress.
Israeli
and Palestinian negotiators began meeting in Jordan Jan. 3 in an
attempt to find a formula to restart formal negotiations.
Israeli-Palestinian talks have been stalled for more than three years
over the issue of Israeli settlement construction.
"For
the last three years, the Palestinians have refused to enter
negotiations, thinking they could impose preconditions upon us,"
Netanyahu told Israeli lawmakers in a closed parliamentary meeting.
"The Palestinians have no interest in entering peace talks. I'm ready to travel now to Ramallah to start peace talks with Abu Mazen, without preconditions. But the simple truth is that Abu Mazen is not ready," he said. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is widely known as Abu Mazen.
Netanyahu's comments were relayed by a meeting participant who spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting was closed.
Abbas says the Palestinians will not resume talks unless Israel stops building in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, areas Israel captured in the 1967 war from Jordan and claimed by the Palestinians as parts of their future state.
Abbas
says continued growth in the settlements, now home to some 500,000
Israelis, is a sign of bad faith by Israel. Israel maintains that the
issue of settlements would be solved automatically once there are
agreed-upon borders and rejects any preconditions to negotiations.
Meeting in London Monday with British Prime Minister David Cameron,
Abbas called for urgency in the attempts to restart peace talks,
repeating his demand for a halt to Israeli construction in the West
Bank.
"Settlements have to stop
in order for us to be able to continue our negotiations — to come to
some sort of solution which will encompass the vision of the Palestinian
state to come in the future," Abbas said, speaking through a
translator.
The talks in Jordan
are taking place under the auspices of the international "Quartet" of
Mideast peace mediators. The Quartet hopes to broker a peace deal by the
end of this year.
In October,
the Quartet — the U.S., U.N., E.U. and Russia — asked the two sides to
produce proposals on territory and security within three months. The
Palestinians believe the deadline is Jan. 26, while Israel considers
that three-month period to have begun when the talks resumed on Jan. 3.
Three meetings have taken place in Jordan so far, and the sides have agreed not to comment publicly on the discussions.
In
his testimony Monday before a parliamentary committee, Netanyahu
accused the Palestinians of violating that agreement. He did not
elaborate.
Saeb Erekat, the Palestinian chief negotiator, denounced Netanyahu's comments as a "baseless attack."
Speaking in London, Erekat said, "The Quartet representatives and the Jordanian side know very well what is happening."
Also
Monday, an Israeli military court sentenced a Palestinian man to five
consecutive life sentences in prison for the grisly killing of five
members of an Israeli family last March.
Amjad
Awad was convicted in November for infiltrating the West Bank
settlement of Itamar and stabbing five people to death. The victims
included the parents, a 3-month-old baby girl, and two other children,
ages 4 and 11.
A military spokesman said the judges "expressed shock that he did not regret his actions" during his sentencing Monday.
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