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Israeli FM with senior Palestinian
calls for peace
by Michael Adler
June 1, 2007 – (Middle East Times) Israeli
foreign minister Tzippi Livni made a plea for Israelis and Palestinians
to begin talking with each other after meeting with several leading
Arab women at a conference May 31.
"The best thing to do is to meet and not to
wait until we can find a way to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,"
she said at a press briefing along with Palestine Legislative Council
member Hanan Ashrawi and UN General Assembly President Sheikha Haya
Rashed Al Khalifa, who is from Bahrain.
Burundi foreign minister Antoinette Batumubwira
and Iraqi first lady Hero Talabani were also there. "Let's
meet today. Let's start to normalize our relations with the Arab
world," Livni said, as violence between Israelis and Palestinians
continued Thursday in the Gaza Strip despite international appeals
for restraint.
With no sign of an end to the conflict, Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will travel to Washington in three weeks'
time to meet US President George W. Bush.
Ashrawi said a two-day meeting here on women leaders
networking for peace and security in the Middle East could "provide
a new venue and provide us with a new momentum for peace."
"Nothing is to be gained if extremists on
any side take over reality, not just the conflict. There is a vested
interest, there is a constituency for peace, and [for] both sides
in Palestine and Israel and within the Arab world to try to make
it work," she said, referring to Israelis and Palestinians.
"This meeting is a starting point. It's not
the end. I hope we work together in order to make that difference,"
Ashrawi said. Livni said that at "the end of the day, we share
the same threats."
She said that stopping terrorism "is something
that works also for the benefit of Palestinian society itself"
and she urged "a full cessation of violence and terrorism so
we can find the common denominator amongst us."
Ashrawi called for an end to violence by both Palestinians
and Israelis, but Livni said Israel had to respond to rocket attacks
"as part of our responsibility to the Israeli citizens."
She said weapons "smuggling from Egypt to
the Gaza Strip" was fanning the conflict. Austrian foreign
minster Ursula Plassnik said: "No situation is hard enough
to resist dialogue forever."
"This was a conference of realists,"
she said, adding that "women do have the capacity and the necessity
to be realists."
Plassnik and US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice had earlier Thursday called for more women to be given high-ranking
positions in the United Nations.
The women's meeting brought together some 20 female ministers, diplomats,
and lawmakers from around the world.
Rice told reporters: "Unless women are fully
participant in their society, in terms of political participation,
economic participation, these societies cannot really be fully democratic."
From:http://www.metimes.com/storyview.php?StoryID=20070601-020105-6451r
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