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JOHANNESBURG, March 31 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has
urged Israel's newly elected leadership to form a government quickly for peace
negotiations to get underway.
"We wish for Israel to form a government so that we can negotiate... fast,
without losing any time," the visiting Palestinian leader told South Africa's
National Assembly in Cape Town on Friday.
Abbas, who is on a three-day state visit, called on South Africa to do
whatever it could to help resolve the conflict between his country and Israel,
the SAPA news agency reported.
"I would like to call upon you and all peace and freedom loving people in
the world to exert all necessary efforts to stop the Israeli aggression," he was
quoted as saying. He also asked for help in ensuring the execution of all signed
peace agreements and United Nations resolutions.
"We are confident that with our dear friend (South African) President Thabo
Mbeki and members of his government, we can reach common position through which
we can push towards reviving the peace process in our region," he said.
Abbas' visit to South Africa, the first one since he took over from the
late Yasser Arafat as the Palestinian leader, came at a critical period in the
troubled history of the Middle East following potentially decisive political
changes in Israel and Palestine recently.
Abbas has just sworn in a new Palestinian government comprising members of the
hardline group Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), which won the Palestinian
parliamentary elections in January by a landslide.
And in Israeli elections held earlier this week, the new centrist Kadima party,
formed by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon a few months ago, emerged as the
strongest political player in Israel with its vow to unilaterally redraw the
final borders of that country.
Abbas accused Israel of pursuing aggressive and illegal practices and of
undermining the peace process.
He demanded that such policies cease "as they intend to draw and define the
final solution unilaterally."
The South African government, which supported a peaceful solution to the Palestinian-Israeli
conflicts based on the two-state principle, was eager to receive
a briefing from Abbas on those political changes and their implications for
the region, the country's official news agency Buanews commented.
The South African Foreign Ministry has said Abbas' visit "comes within the
context of South Africa's priority to promote the peaceful resolution of
conflict and post-conflict reconstruction and development in the Middle East,
through .. continued dialogue with both the Israelis and Palestinians."
Abbas told South Africa's legislators that Palestinians were keen and
interested to learn more about South Africa, which peacefully emerged from
brutal apartheid rule 12 year ago, and to use their experience in advancing the
political process in the Middle East.
"We welcome any effort that your government would make
and we assure you, that despite all our suffering, we will remain committed to
all peace initiatives aimed at reviving and protecting the peace process," he
said. Enditem |