Sunday, 10 March, 2002
Palestinians
Sceptical About Sharon Peace Talk Proposal
VOA
News
9
Mar 2002 19:35 UTC
 
Palestinian leaders
say they are skeptical about a suggestion from Israel that truce talks
resume while the Israeli-Palestinian fighting continues.
A spokesman for
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat told V-O-A that if the Israelis are
serious, they should stop their attacks immediately.
Mr. Sharon's comment,
during an Israeli television interview Friday marked the first time he
did not demand a full week of calm before talks resume. The prime
minister says Israel is willing to discuss a cease-fire plan, but if
terrorism continues, Israeli forces will continue to fight hard.
Israeli attacks on
Palestinian targets continued Saturday, with missile strikes on
government buildings in Gaza City and the West Bank town of Nablus. A
teenage Palestinian girl was shot dead by Israeli soldiers in a
refugee camp near Bethlehem. Israeli forces also carried out an
operation in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. There are no
reports of casualties in Khan Younis.
Israeli forces killed
at least 39 Palestinians Friday, the deadliest day of the current wave
of violence. The deaths came after a Palestinian gunman killed five
people at an Israeli settlement in Gaza.
Palestinian officials
say PLO leader Yasser Arafat spoke with U.S. Secretary of State Colin
Powell Friday, urging immediate U.S. intervention to stop the
escalation of violence.
Israeli sources say
Prime Minister Sharon also spoke with Mr. Powell Friday, informing the
secretary of a decision to drop the demand for a week of calm.
U.S. State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher, criticized both Israeli and Palestinian
officials Friday, saying they must consider the consequences of their
policies. He said Mr. Arafat must make a bigger effort to stop the
violence, and criticized Israel for using strong military force in
heavily populated areas.
Vice President Cheney
and the U.S. Mideast peace envoy, Anthony Zinni, are preparing for
separate visits to the Middle East to work on ending the violence.
General Zinni has been unsuccessful in two previous attempts to
negotiate a cease-fire.
Some information
for this report provided by AFP and Reuters.
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