/ 27 May 2005

Bush stalls Abbas on reviving road map

United States President George Bush rebuffed an appeal from the Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, on Thursday for a swift revival of peace negotiations and the rapid creation of a Palestinian state after Israel pulls out of the Gaza Strip.

On his first visit to the White House since he was elected in January, the Palestinian president told a joint press conference with Bush: ”It is time for the Palestinian-Israeli conflict to end.

”Time is becoming our greatest enemy. We should end this conflict before it’s too late.”

Abbas added: ”We should [after the Gaza pullout] immediately move to permanent status negotiations to deal with the issues of East Jerusalem, the capital of the future state of Palestine, the issue of refugees, borders and water.”

Bush said that ”we have reached a moment of hope” and ”a great achievement of history is within reach: the creation of a peaceful democratic Palestinian state”.

He said: ”I believe the Palestinian people are fully capable of justly governing themselves in peace with their neighbours.

”I believe the interests of the Israeli people would be served by a peaceful Palestinian state. And I believe now is the time for all parties in this conflict to move beyond old grievances and act forcefully in the cause of peace.”

Bush added: ”With concrete actions by the United States, the Palestinians, Israel and other nations, we can transform this opportunity into real momentum.”

But while Bush praised Abbas as a ”man of courage” and applauded his ”rejection of terrorism”, he signalled that, like the Israeli government, he sees no urgency to return to the US-led ”road map” peace plan.

”The imminent Israeli disengagement from Gaza and parts of the West Bank presents an opportunity to lay the groundwork for a return to the road map,” he said.

Bush has previously said that he envisages the creation of a Palestinian state by the time he leaves office in January 2009.

On Thursday, he indicated that the Palestinian leadership would be judged by how it handles the governance of the Gaza strip after the Israeli withdrawal in the autumn before there would be movement on other issues.

Abbas said he had told Bush that the continued expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the construction of the vast steel and concrete barrier through the territory was undermining the prospects of creating a viable Palestinian state as well as contributing to frustration and despair among ordinary Palestinians.

”We stress that democracy cannot flourish under occupation and in the absence of freedom,” said Abbas.

Bush called for Israel to alleviate Palestinian suffering, and he reminded Ariel Sharon’s government of its road map obligations to cease the relentless expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

”Israel should not undertake any activity that contravenes road map obligations or prejudice final status negotiations with regard to Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem. Therefore Israel must remove unauthorised outposts and stop settlement expansion,” said Bush.

”The barrier being erected by Israel as part of its security effort must be a security rather than a political barrier, and its route should take into account, consistent with security needs, its impact on Palestinians not engaged in terrorist activities.”

Bush has given similar warnings in the past.

They have done little to stop continued settlement construction and Sharon has failed to fulfil commitments to the US president to dismantle Jewish outposts in the West Bank. – Guardian Unlimited Â