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Truce signals new era as Sharon and Abbas meet

Donald Macintyre
Tuesday 08 February 2005 01:00 GMT
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Ariel Sharon, the Israeli Prime Minister and Mahmoud Abbas, the new Palestinian President, will formally call a halt to four-and-a-half years of armed conflict when they meet today at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt, senior Israeli and Palestinian officials said last night.

Ariel Sharon, the Israeli Prime Minister and Mahmoud Abbas, the new Palestinian President, will formally call a halt to four-and-a-half years of armed conflict when they meet today at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt, senior Israeli and Palestinian officials said last night.

The two separate but interdependent announcements that both sides intend to halt the violence, which has cost more than 4,000 lives since September 2000, is a major boost for Mr Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen. He had been pressing for a reciprocal declaration from Israel after securing agreement to a truce from armed factions a fortnight ago.

Mohammed Dahlan, the former minister who has been closely involved in security talks with Israeli officials, backed up an earlier prediction by the cabinet minister Saeb Erekat. "We have agreed to announce a neutral ceasefire,'' he said.

A senior Israeli official confirmed that Mr Abbas would announce a "cessation" of armed action against Israel while Israel would itself declare that it would "cease all pro-active military activity".

However, Mr Sharon is expected to make clear that continuation of the ceasefire will depend on a series of steps that the Palestinians will have to undertake to prevent factions from being able to resume hostilities.

After meeting Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State, yesterday, Mr Abbas said he was hoping for a reciprocal announcement from Israel in response to the period of "quiet" he had negotiated with the factions. But Israel hitherto had been reluctant to make a formal ceasefire declaration of the sort sought by Mr Abbas.

Instead, it has taken a series of steps designed to maintain the so far undeclared truce. Israel has largely handed over control of Gaza ­ scene of the worst conflict during the past year ­ to Palestinian forces and has agreed not to pursue wanted militants other than in cases where it suspects they are planning an attack on Israel.

News of the imminent ceasefire announcement last night came as Ms Rice announced that President George Bush was sending a US general as a "security co-ordinator", marking the US's most serious engagement in the Middle East peace process for three years.

Ms Rice again went out of her way to demonstrate US support for Mr Abbas after the meeting yesterday on the eve of today's summit with Mr Sharon in Egypt, the first top level meeting between Palestinian and Israeli leaders since the uprising began. She disclosed that Mr Abbas as well as Mr Sharon would make separate visits to the White House in the spring.

General William Ward, a decorated former commander of the Nato stabilisation force in post-war Bosnia, will report directly to Ms Rice and will have an important role in reforming, reorganising and training Palestinian security forces, as well as seeking to ensure co- ordination between Israel and the Palestinians to prevent the ceasefire from breaking down, as an earlier one did in 2003 after less than three months.

Raanan Gissin, a spokesman for Ariel Sharon, said yesterday: "This is someone who will be like a referee, if there is a need ... to mediate and prevent a crisis. The American involvement will increase as progress is made."

Ms Rice emphasised American support for the "historic decision" to withdraw settle-ments from Gaza later this year. But she also confirmed that she had told Israel that it, as well as the Palestinians, must live up to its obligations under the road map, including to dismantle dozens of illegal outposts in the West Bank and to halt settlement expansion.

Ms Rice said that the Palestinians should be "very proud" of their recent presidential elections. She underlined the contrast with the US's virtual boycott of relations with Yasser Arafat during the past four years by praising Mr Abbas for standing on a platform of ending the armed intifada.

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