News from Saturday 23 March to 24 March 2002
Sharon Seeks to Attend Arab Summit
Ross
Dunn Jerusalem 24
Mar 2002 17:32 UTC

Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon says he wants to address the summit of the Arab League in
Beirut later this week.
Mr. Sharon says he
has raised with the Bush administration the idea of attending the Arab League
Summit. In an interview with Newsweek magazine, he says he asked
Washington to help intervene in his favor.
Mr. Sharon says he
wants to discuss a Saudi peace initiative with Arab leaders in the Lebanese
capital.
The Saudi proposal
calls for an end to the Arab-Israeli conflict on the basis of exchanging land
for peace.
Mr. Sharon says that
given the opportunity he would also present his own peace plan, which sets out
three phases for implementation.
Under the first stage
of the Israeli leader's plan, the two sides would observe the cease-fire drawn
up last year by the head of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, George
Tenet.
Israel and the
Palestinians would then implement the recommendations of the inquiry into the
current violence, headed by former U.S. senator George
Mitchell.
The second stage
would consist of a long-term interim agreement under which the Palestinians
would "gain territorial contiguity."
And in the third
stage, the final borders of an independent Palestinian state would be
determined on the basis of United Nations resolutions calling for Israel to
withdraw from areas occupied since the 1967 Middle East
war.
But any notion that
Mr. Sharon would be granted an audience in a forum such as the Arab League
seems outlandish to most observers in the Middle East.
The secretary of the
Arab League, Amr Moussa, says he regards any suggestion that Mr. Sharon would
be allowed to attend the summit as preposterous.
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