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Ahmadinejad offers 'simple' solution for Palestinians
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Oct 2, 2011

Egypt supports Palestinian conditions for peace talks
Cairo (AFP) Oct 2, 2011 - Egypt's foreign minister Mohammed Amr said on Sunday that his country supported Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's bid to join peace talks with Israel once there is a settlement freeze.

"Egypt supports the Palestinian president's commitment to the resumption of negotiations based on clear parameters and the halting of Israeli settlements," Amr said in a statement.

He was speaking after talks with Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat and the Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations, Riad Mansur, in Cairo.

The international Quartet which groups the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States, had urged the two sides to return to talks within a month, with the goal of reaching a deal before the end of 2012.

The Palestinians insist that they will not join negotiations without a settlement freeze and clear parameters for the talks.

On Wednesday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had urged Egypt as well as the diplomatic Quartet to pressure the Palestinians and Israel to seek a peace deal.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Sunday proposed a "simple solution" to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict under which "everyone should go to his home."

"If the backers of the Zionist regime want to solve the issue... the solution is simple ... everyone should go home," he told an international conference, as the United Nations mulls a Palestinian statehood bid.

"Some poor people were brought to Palestine on the promise of security and jobs while they made Palestinian people into refugees... So now Palestinians should go home and those brought here should go to theirs," he said.

Tehran's two-day International Conference on Palestine was attended by parliamentarians from some 20 nations and figures including Khaled Meshaal, exiled chief of the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.

At the opening on Saturday, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reiterated the Islamic republic's opposition to the division of Palestinian lands.

"Any plan which would lead to the division of Palestine is unacceptable," Khamenei said. "Any plan that would create two states ... would be accepting a Zionist state in the land of Palestine."

Ahmadinejad, who is known for making fiery anti-Israeli speeches, on Sunday dubbed the Jewish state a cancerous tumor" which had to be removed to save the region and the world.

Iran has not recognised Israel since its 1979 Islamic revolution and backs Palestinian and Lebanese militant groups fighting against the Jewish state.

On September 23, the UN Security Council took up a request for full recognition of a Palestinian state over the vehement opposition of Israel and the United States.

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US welcomes Israel call for return to peace talks
Washington (AFP) Oct 2, 2011 - The United States on Sunday welcomed Israel's apparent acceptance of a plan by the so-called Middle East Quartet to return to talks with the Palestinians, saying it was the best chance for peace.

Israel called Sunday for an immediate return to peace talks under the framework of a proposal by the Quartet -- the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia.

But the Jewish state said the plan included no preconditions -- an interpretation the Palestinians quickly rejected.

"We welcome the Israeli government's announcement today expressing readiness to resume negotiations with the Palestinians, as called for by the Quartet," US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.

"The Palestinians expressed support for the Quartet approach on September 29," she added.

"The US once again calls on both parties to resume negotiations without preconditions, on the timetable proposed by the Quartet, as the best means to advance their interests, resolve their differences, and fulfill the president's two-state vision."

The Palestinians said earlier that Israel could not say it had accepted the Quartet statement without announcing a halt to Israeli settlement construction and a willingness to use the lines that existed before the 1967 Six Day War as a basis for negotiations on future borders.



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WAR REPORT
Israel, Palestinians spar over Quartet peace call
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 2, 2011
Israel called Sunday for an immediate return to peace talks under the framework of a Quartet proposal, but it said the plan included no preconditions, an interpretation the Palestinians quickly rejected. Israel's apparent acceptance of the peace proposal from the international Quartet, and the Palestinian response, illustrated the gulf between the way each side has interpreted the loosely-wo ... read more


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