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JERUSALEM, April 21 (Xinhuanet) -- Israeli Defense
Minister Shaul Mofaz agreed Thursday to a three-week delay for the Gaza pullout
plan, originally set for July 20.
The postponement to Aug. 15 is aimed at avoiding clashing with a traditional Jewish mourning period which ends on Aug. 14.
Mofaz gave the green light to the delay, proposed by
Disengagement Administration head Yonatan Bassi, at a meeting with top military
and police officials, security officials said.
Mofaz's recommendation will then go to Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, who is set to announce the delay after security chiefs endorse it.
Earlier, Sharon denied that Israel will further
withdraw from the West Bank after the scheduled pullout plan this summer.
The prime minister denied reports that he might carry
out a further evacuation from the West Bank where a majority of Jewish settlers
are living.
"I want to deny the reports stating that following
the first disengagement plan, Israel intends to implement an additional
disengagement in the West Bank," Sharon told his cabinet.
"This subject was not even mentioned in my visit to
the United States," said Sharon, who held talks with US President George W. Bush
earlier this month in Washington.
Also on Thursday, Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed
Qurei and Israeli Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres met in Jerusalem to
coordinate ways to implement the Gaza pullout plan.
The meeting lasted about two hours, Palestinian
officials said,adding that chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and Minister
of Civil Affairs Mohamed Dahlan attended the meeting.
At the meeting, Peres called on Qurei to increase
Palestinian security operations so that negotiations between the two sides canbe
renewed.
While terming the meeting as "good," Peres said the
merger of the Palestinian security bodies is an important step ahead of talks.
For his part, Qurei pledged that changes in the
Palestinian security apparatuses will be carried out soon.
They agreed that professional teams of the two sides
should renew their talks and there will be economic cooperation for the pullout.
In New York, a senior UN official said the
Palestinians must domore to reorganize their security forces to prevent violence
and Israel must halt all settlement activities if recent hopes for resolving the
Middle East conflict are to be sustained.
"Recent events in the Middle East continue to confirm
the potential for peace, but warn us as well that this new process is still
fragile," said Under-Secretary-General for Political AffairsKieran Prendergast
in a briefing to the Security Council.
He welcomed the public reiteration by both sides of
their willingness to coordinate Israel's planned withdrawal of its settlements
in the Gaza Strip this summer, but voiced concern "at reports that this
announced readiness to coordinate has not yet been sufficiently translated into
practice."
"Direct dialogue and communication are essential
first steps toward ensuring that the disengagement is as smooth and non-violent
as possible," he added.
"The pressing challenge for the parties and the
international community is to take all possible actions to ensure that
disengagement happens, that it happens in a coordinated way, and that it does
not become a dead end, but contributes to the momentum for peace," he said.
While stressing that there is "no quick fix" to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he urged the two parties to implement their
commitments under the roadmap peace plan and an accord reached recently at the
Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Meanwhile, sporadic violent incidents continued in
the region.
The Israeli military said on Thursday that a jeep
patrolling the Gaza-Israel border was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade
firedfrom Gaza, seriously wounding a soldier.
Israel's commanders in Gaza also said they noted an
increase inPalestinian attacks in recent days, warning that a two-month
trucemight be in jeopardy.
In central Gaza, a riot erupted after Israeli
soldiers closed aroad. One Palestinian was wounded by Israeli gunfire before
soldiers lifted the roadblock, witnesses said. Enditem |