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EU strikes optimistic note on Mideast peace talks
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Dec 03, 2013


Abbas to act against Israel at UN if peace talks fail
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Dec 03, 2013 - President Mahmud Abbas has warned the Palestinians will take action against Israel through international bodies if peace talks fail, ahead of a visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry.

"The talks are going through great difficulties because of the obstacles created by Israel," Abbas told visiting Arab journalists late Monday at his headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

"If we don't obtain our rights through negotiations, we have the right to go to international institutions," he said.

"The commitment to refrain from action at the UN ends after the nine-month period agreed for talks."

US-brokered peace talks, which resumed at the end of July after a three-year gap, have already hit a deadlock over Israeli settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank on land the Palestinians want for their future state.

The Palestinians agreed to suspend action against Israel through international bodies for the duration of the talks, including at the United Nations, where they won non-member observer status in a landmark General Assembly vote in November last year.

Kerry is to return to the region later this week for talks with Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on his eighth overnight visit to the region since he took office in February.

It will be the US top diplomat's first visit since Israel backed down on plans to build some 20,000 new settler homes in the West Bank.

But Netanyahu's government has already slated thousands of new settler homes for construction since the talks resumed in July.

Last month, Kerry warned the settlements issue could break the negotiations at the risk of sparking a third Palestinian uprising.

The Palestinian negotiating team has already tendered its resignation over the issue but Abbas has yet to accept it.

The EU envoy to Israel expressed optimism Tuesday about US efforts to broker an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal and insisted the West had taken a tough line on Israeli settlement construction.

A steady flood of Israeli settlement announcements have threatened to derail negotiations relaunched in late July, but EU Ambassador to Israel Lars Faaborg-Andersen said there was still time for progress.

"There is reason to be more optimistic for a breakthrough this time around," he told AFP.

"We're not at crunch time yet."

US Secretary of State John Kerry is due back in the region Wednesday to meet both sides in a bid to breathe life into the talks, the latest attempt in a stumbling peace process first begun more than two decades ago.

Direct talks between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have been jarred by three major settlement announcements, two of which were made in tandem with Israel's release of Palestinians jailed for attacks.

The third, which involved plans for a massive tranche of 24,000 new settler homes, was quickly rescinded after it sparked international outrage.

"It's a very unfortunate dynamic, the prisoner release and the settlement announcements," Faaborg-Andersen said, noting that both the European Union and the United States had sharply condemned the settlement plans.

He rejected the suggestion that the West was not taking a tough enough line on Israeli construction on land the Palestinians want for a future state.

"The international community is united on the issue of settlements, which is probably why the 24,000 tenders did not materialise," he said.

The parties agreed to nine months of negotiations, but the halfway point is rapidly approaching with little outward sign of progress.

But Faaborg-Andersen said the tenacious diplomacy of Kerry, who managed to cajole the two sides back to the negotiating table after a three-year hiatus, could yet surprise peace talk sceptics.

"This is not something we've seen in some time. He's a very, very strong partner of Israel, and of the Palestinian Authority," he said.

"They have a partner who is very, very committed and that augurs well for the process."

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