Hamas rejects Bush peace proposal

Bush calls for an international conference within months to revive the peace process.

Abbas and Olmert
Bush hailed the talks between Abbas, left and Olmert [Reuters]

Bush ‘crusade’

 

Abu Zuhri also called on the Arab Muslim world “to support Palestine in the face of the crusade conducted by Bush.”

 

Ismail  Radwan, another Hamas spokesman, said in Gaza: “The conference will lead to increased pressure on Mahmud Abbas and separate the Gaza Strip more deeply from the West Bank while sowing division among Palestinians”.

 
Bush called on Monday for an international conference within months to revive the Middle East peace process.
 
He said Israel, the Palestinians and their Arab neighbours could do more to help revive Middle East peace prospects.
 
Bush fell short of calling on Israel to end its 40-year occupation, saying only that “unauthorised outposts should be removed and settlement expansion ended”.
 
‘Conditions for peace’
 
Bush said “the world can do more to build the conditions for peace”, adding that Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, would chair the gathering and that attendance would be limited to states that back the creation of a Palestinian state, reject violence, and recognise Israel.
 

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Bush also warned the Palestinians that backing Hamas which seized Gaza from the forces that back Abbas on June 15, would be a victory for the group’s “foreign sponsors” in Syria and Iran and “would crush the possibility of a Palestinian state”.

 
His speech at the White House came hours after Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, met Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president.
 
Bush told Hamas: “You must stop Gaza from being a safe haven for attacks against Israel. You must accept the legitimate Palestinian government,” allow aid to Gaza, disarm militias, and recognise Israel.
 
Bush also urged Arab nations to end “the fiction that Israel does not exist”, curb anti-Israel rhetoric in their media and send cabinet-level officials to the Jewish state.
 
And he pushed Olmert to continue to release Palestinian tax revenue to Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian prime minister, halt Israeli settlement expansion and dismantle unauthorised outposts.
 
Commitment to Israel
 
Israelis “should be confident that the United States will never abandon its commitment to the security of Israel as a Jewish state and homeland for Jewish people”, he said.
 

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Bush telephoned Abbas to reaffirm
US support for the president [AP]

Bush also hailed the talks between Olmert and Abbas, as a senior Israeli official said that the prime minister had pledged to free 250 Palestinian prisoners in a goodwill gesture to the Palestinian leader.

 
But while welcoming the release, the Palestinians said the freeing of 250 prisoners out of the more than 11,000 held in Israeli jails was not enough.
 
Bush also announced a direct US contribution of $80m to help Abbas reform his security services. Two US officials said the money was being shifted from Gaza to Fayyad’s government.
 
More US aid will come when former British prime minister Tony Blair, now the envoy for the Middle East “Quartet” of the US, UN, European Union, and Russia, reports success in building a plan for bolstering Palestinian security and political  institutions.
 
“With the proper foundation, we can soon begin serious negotiations toward the creation of a Palestinian state,” said Bush.
 
Backing Abbas
 
The Quartet is to meet in Lisbon, the Portuguese capital, on Thursday to take stock after Abbas appointed a new government following the takeover of Gaza by Hamas.
 
Meanwhile Bush telephoned Abbas on Monday to reaffirm Washington’s support for the Palestinian president, a spokesman for Abbas said.
 
The two men spoke after Bush called for an international conference to revive Middle East peace talks.
 
“President Bush expressed his support for president Abbas and for efforts to relaunch the peace process through this conference” in the autumn,
Nabil Abu Rudeina told reporters.
 
“President Bush also expressed his support for the Palestinian government led by Salam Fayyad,” he added.
 
But some analysts say the strategy to back Abbas and isolate Hamas could backfire if Abbas is seen as a collaborator with Israel and Washington.
Source: News Agencies