Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas chairs a meeting of the Fatah party's executive
committee in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Sunday. (ASSOCIATED
PRESS)
Posted by Arab News
By MOHAMMED MAR’I/ARAB NEWS
Published: Mar 7, 2010 22:02
Updated: Mar 7, 2010 22:02
RAMALLAH:
A senior Palestinian official on Sunday said that the PLO Executive
Committee endorsed the resumption of indirect peace talks with Israel.
The
official told Arab News at the end of the PLO's Executive Committee
meeting in Ramallah that the decision-making body "gave (Palestinian
President Mahmoud) Abbas the green light to resume the indirect peace
talks with Israel."
On Saturday night, the Fatah's Central Committee also authorized Abbas to restart the stalling peace talks, the official added.
Meanwhile,
the US Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell will meet Abbas in
Ramallah on Monday to receive the PA's final response to the US
proposal on resuming the indirect talks.
Israeli media sources
said that the indirect talks were expected to be launched Sunday in a
meeting between Mitchell and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Mitchell
arrived in the region on Saturday to discuss with Israeli and
Palestinian leadership the resumption of the talks. Upon his arrival,
Mitchell met with Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak in Tel Aviv. The
meeting was defined by Barak as "excellent.”
However, the
foreign ministers of the Arab League announced in Cairo Wednesday they
were supporting the American initiative for indirect negotiations,
qualifying their support with a four-month deadline. They said no
progress would be possible without a complete settlement freeze.
The
US has been pushing for the resumption of talks primarily through the
shuttle diplomacy of Mitchell, who is expected to continue as a
go-between in the indirect negotiations.
In November, under heavy
US pressure, Netanyahu persuaded his Cabinet to authorize an
unprecedented 10-month settlement construction slowdown. But Israel
continues to build 3,000 apartments that were authorized before, and
construction in east Jerusalem has not been restricted.
Mitchell
proposed a four-month indirect peace negotiations between Israel and PA
sponsored by US administration. Abbas had asked for guarantees that
Israel would be committed to the outcomes of the talks.
On the
ground, Israeli forces closed the Atarah checkpoint, a bottleneck
separates Ramallah governorate from the north, south and eastern areas
of the West Bank.
Palestinian security sources said that the
Israeli soldiers closed the checkpoint, built on the northern edge of
Birzeit town, after students from the town clashed with soldiers
manning the checkpoint.
The sources added that several students
suffered from tear gas inhalation after the soldier used teargas
canisters and rubber-coated metal bullets to disperse the protesters.
Also
in the West Bank, around 100 Palestinians clashed with Israeli soldiers
during an anti-Israeli settlements demonstration in the city of Beit
Jala.
Palestinian sources said that three Palestinian journalists were wounded from rubber-coated metal bullets.