Meanwhile, Christmas eve peace talks got stuck on Israeli settement expansion

Ramattan News Agency is reporting today that the talks between the Israeli and Palestinian negotiating teams on Christmas eve were “difficult”.

Ramattan says that Chief Palestinian negotiator, Saeb Erekat, “said in an interview with RNA on Monday night, that the two delegations discussed nothing but the issue of the Israeli settlements in Jerusalem and the West Bank”. Erekat said that the Palestinians insisted that all settlement activity must stop, while the Israeli delegates mentioned “security issues”.

Erekat said that the two negotiating teams would not meet again until after a “summit” meeting on Tuesday (today? or next Tuesday? where? in Bethlehem? in Jerusalem?) between Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. The Ramattan News Agency report is published here.

UPDATE: Haaretz says on Wednesday 26 December that the “summit” will be held on Thursday 27 December. Haaretz reports that “Official sources in Jerusalem say the Har Homa imbroglio is the result of a decision by low-ranking government bureaucrats in the Housing Ministry. They say that Olmert was not informed of the decision in advance, but on the international front, these explanations do not seem to be enlisting much support. Moreover, the Har Homa affair exposed the differences in the perceptions that both parties adhere to. As far as Israel is concerned, the neighborhood is an integral part of unified Jerusalem, and not part of the territories. Construction at Har Homa is not subject to the same bureaucratic maze that any construction in the territories – be it a house, shack or electricity line – must endure before it is approved. The Palestinians and their supporters in the international community do not make that distinction. To them, any Israeli construction east of the Green Line, which was Israel’s border before the 1967 Six-Day War, is an illegal settlement. They treat construction in East Jerusalem much the same as they treat construction in the settlement blocs in the West Bank. To the Palestinians, construction in the territories is an obstacle to peace and an act that jeopardizes the negotiations. In addition, the Palestinians realize that Israel – which is expecting its first visit by U.S. President George W. Bush next month – is at a disadvantage internationally as far as settlements are concerned. Their objective is to dominate the headlines until Bush arrives. But the problem goes deeper than head-butting in the media. Israel has demanded that the Palestinians fulfill their duties according to the road map plan for peace, which the U.S. devised for both parties. But Israel has failed to meet its own obligations such as the evacuation of settlements, a total freeze on all construction in the territories and allowing the Palestinians to reopen their institutions in East Jerusalem”… The Haaretz report on Thursday’s Abbas-Olmert “summit” is here.

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