Israeli, Palestinian Leaders Reach Cease-Fire Agreement
http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=B7F32B:2F72C9DThe announcement is seen as a major confidence-building move that
could pave the way for more substantive peace negotiations
Israeli PM Ariel Sharon right and Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas left shake hands at Sharm el-Sheik
summitPalestinians and Israelis announced Tuesday an agreement to end
more than four years of bloodshed that have resulted in thousands of
deaths. The announcement is seen as a major confidence building move
that could pave the way for more substantive peace negotiations.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian leader Mahmud
Abbas announced an agreement Tuesday to end all hostilities associated
with the Palestinian Intifada that began in September 2000.
Meeting in the Egyptian Red Sea Resort of Sharm el-Sheikh for a
one-day summit hosted by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Mr. Abbas
pledged that all acts of violence against Israel would end
immediately. Mr. Sharon promised that Israeli military operations
would end in all Palestinian locations.
Mr. Abbas called the agreement a new opportunity for both the
Palestinians and Israelis to renew their hope for peace. His words
were translated by an interpreter provided by the Palestinians.
"What we have announced today, in addition to being the implementation
of the first article of the road map that was established by the
quartet, it is also a basic step an important step that provides a new
opportunity for restoring the peace process and its momentum so that
the Palestinian and Israeli peoples restore hope and confidence in the
possibility for achieving peacem,” said Mr Abbas.
Mr. Sharon urged Israelis and Palestinians not to allow this
opportunity for peace to slip away. Over the past four years, ten
cease-fire agreements have been reached. All of them failed to last.
Tuesday, Mr. Sharon called on both sides to wipe out acts of terror.
His words were translated through an interpreter provided by Israel.
"We must all work unceasingly and indefatigably to break down the
terrorist mechanism once and for all,” said Mr. Sharon. “It is
only by away with violence that we will be able to give hope to peace.
We must not allow this opportunity to slip from our fingers, this hope
this opportunity for a genuine new start."
Mr. Sharon said deeds, not words, would move the peace process
forward. After the summit, a spokesman for the Palestinian faction
Hamas said it was not bound by the cease-fire agreement.
In closing his remarks, Mr. Sharon said Palestinians and Israelis will
have to give up some of their dreams in order to achieve a two state
solution, with Palestinians and Israelis living side by side in peace.
The summit also produced an agreement by Israel to form committees to
deal with the issues of Palestinian prisoners, the redeployment of
Israeli troops and Palestinian fugitives. Israel had already announced
plans to free 900 of 8000 Palestinian prisoners, pull back its troops
and end assassinations of Palestinian fugitives.
Even so, Mr. Abbas noted that many unresolved issues remain, including
the release of Palestinian prisoners, the separation fence being built
by Israel and the dismantling of Israeli settlements in Gaza and the
West Bank. Mr. Sharon said Tuesday he remains committed to the
withdrawal of all settlements in Gaza.
The summit occurred following weeks of intense negotiations between
both sides. President Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah of Jordan,
who also attended the summit, reportedly played significant roles in
bringing the two sides together. At the conclusion of the
summit, it was announced that Egypt and Jordan would return their
embassy staff to Israel. Both countries had recalled their ambassadors
in protest over Israeli military operations in the Palestinian
Occupied Territories.