Quartet seeks halt to settlements
Middle East peace negotiators also urge Israel to remove outposts and roadblocks.

Rice said: “It’s very difficult to do this in a kind of macro way, or a general way.
“It comes down to very specific issues, that issue of that checkpoint or that roadblock that’s preventing that kind of economic activity in that town … it gets that specific.”
She also said that there was now “quite a bit of detail” on what effect the removal of 50 roadblocks that Israel had promised to remove would have.
“It’s a much more labour-intensive and specific process than I think one could imagine,” she said.
The UN says there are more than 500 obstacles impeding movement in the West Bank, including gates, checkpoints and dirt mounds blocking passages.
Road map ‘failures’
Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian prime minister, said that Israel’s failure to address the settlement issue was one of the factors that had pushed peace talks towards collapse.
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“Israel has failed to meet any of its obligations from the road map, including a freeze in settlement activity,” he said.
“That is most troubling. Unless that changes, the political process is being stripped of its meaning.”
After meeting Tzipi Livni, the Israeli foreign minister, Fayyad said that the Palestinian government had met its commitments by reforming its financial sector and praised the donor community for providing additional money.
However, Israeli officials noted that Livni had discussed with Fayyad the 60 road blocks, one major checkpoint, and other impediments to Palestinian freedom of movement that had been removed.
They also said that an additional 5,000 work permits had been granted to help Palestinians seeking work inside Israel.
| “Israel has failed to meet any of its obligations from the road map, including a freeze in settlement activity” Salam Fayyad, Palestinian prime minister |
Rice said Arab countries that have pledged money to the Palestinian Authority, but not delivered, had been prodded to come up with the funding they have promised.
Before the London talks, aid agencies had urged the Quartet to use the meeting to press Israel to end its blockade of Gaza.
The group was told of the impending impending humanitarian crisis there and the difficulty of life for ordinary people.
However, speaking to Al Jazeera, Blair insisted that it was down to the Hamas movement, which took full control of the Gaza Strip last year, to renounce violence before help could be given.
