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Thursday, March 27, 2008

Israel to approve security equipment for Abbas

 

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JERUSALEM  ( 2008-03-27 10:25:47 ) : 

Israel's defence minister said on Wednesday he had agreed to the transfer of new vehicles and equipment to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's security forces and to ease travel restrictions for West Bank businesses.
But, citing fear of militant infiltrations, Ehud Barak signalled he would continue to resist Palestinian and Western demands for mass removals of checkpoints and roadblocks that restrict travel and trade within the occupied West Bank.
"The list of steps we intend to take to make life easier for the Palestinians, without relinquishing our overriding security responsibility, is important in moving the negotiations forward and maintaining a positive atmosphere," Barak told reporters before talks with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.
Israel hopes the measures, announced ahead of a weekend visit by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, will help blunt complaints it was not doing enough to bolster US-backed peace talks and Fayyad's "law and order" drive in the West Bank.
Barak said the roster included equipment for Abbas's forces, including his elite Presidential Guard, and new vehicles, some of them armoured. Barak's office said he discussed the items with Fayyad but it declined to give details on types or amounts.
Previous shipments for Abbas's forces have been supplied by European and Arab donors, and were at times held up by Israel.
"The talks (with Barak) focused on implementing the road map obligations as well as security and economic conditions in the Palestinian areas," Fayyad's office said in a statement, referring to a 2003 US-sponsored plan for a Palestinian state. A Palestinian official said Barak was "forthcoming" on issues like roadblocks and deployment of Abbas's forces. But the official said Fayyad would not immediately elaborate further, preferring to see if Israel was serious about implementation.

Israeli group demands investigation into killing of militants

AL QUDS: An Israeli human rights group is demanding a criminal investigation into the military's killing of four Palestinian militants earlier this month.
Israeli troops killed the militants in the West Bank city of Bethlehem on March 12, riddling their car with bullets. One was a local Islamic Jihad commander who Israel said was involved in planning suicide bombings.
The B'Tselem group claims troops did not try to arrest the men, but opened fire even though they didn't try to escape or use their weapons. B'Tselem says that appears to Israeli court rulings allowing the targeted killing of militants only if they cannot easily be arrested.
The group's version of events is based on testimony from Palestinian witnesses. The Israeli military had no immediate comment Thursday.