Bethlehem handover set for Wednesday ( 2003-07-02 15:09) (Agencies)
Israeli and Palestinian leaders promised painful concessions at a summit that
raised hopes of ending nearly three years of violence, and the two sides worked
out final details to put Bethlehem back under Palestinian control.
Israeli army armoured personnel carriers are moved away on
a truck from a military base at the Gush Etzion block of settlements near
the West Bank town of Bethlehem, Tuesday, July 1, 2003.
[AP}
Speaking in front of Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon's office before a summit Tuesday, Palestinian Prime
Minister Mahmoud Abbas said the turnover of Bethlehem and Gaza would be
"followed by pullbacks from the rest of the cities and towns and Palestinian
refugee camps."
The handover of the ancient town was to take place Wednesday, officials on
both sides said, after the last of the Israeli soldiers left. On Tuesday, army
transport trucks hauled equipment away from two Israeli bases next to the town.
Israeli forces have occupied Bethlehem several times during nearly three
years of fighting, once holding the Church of the Nativity under siege for a
month, demanding surrender of Palestinian gunmen who had fled inside the shrine
that marks the traditional birthplace of Jesus.
After a suicide bombing on a Jerusalem bus on Nov. 21, carried out by a
Palestinian from Bethlehem, soldiers went back in and stayed.
On Tuesday, senior commanders met and worked out the details of the handover.
In a statement, the military said Israel would be in charge of security of
Israelis, including settlers in nearby villages, while Palestinian security
forces committed to preventing "terrorist attacks in the areas under their
responsibility."
A similar formula held in Gaza, where Israeli troops pulled out late Sunday.
The Tuesday summit was the first time the two leaders spoke before reporters
and cameras at a Jerusalem summit, their third in six weeks. The atmosphere was
cordial and friendly.
Palestinian and Israeli Cabinet ministers, some of them enemies until
recently, sat at a table next to the two podiums, chatting and smiling. That
established a relaxed setting for conciliatory language not heard in the region
during three years of bloodshed.
"Even if we are required to make painful compromises, I will be willing to
make them for the sake of true peace - a peace for generations, the peace that
we all yearn for," Sharon said.
Abbas responded in kind: "Enough suffering, enough death, enough pain. Let us
stride forward with courage and without hesitation to the future we all
deserve."
Both premiers committed themselves to the "road map" peace plan President
Bush launched at a June 4 Mideast summit with Sharon and Abbas. The plan leads
through three stages to the creation of a Palestinian state in 2005.
Abbas and Sharon, joined by senior Cabinet ministers and aides, then withdrew
for two hours of talks aimed at resolving disputes over the next moves.
They agreed to bring back committees that were set up during the first years
of peace efforts in the 1990s to discuss issues including security, prisoners
and legal matters, according to officials on both sides. The committees were
suspended during the current violence.
Abbas also asked for freedom of movement for Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat, who has been confined to his West Bank headquarters by Israel for more
than a year. Sharon said he would consider allowing Arafat to move to Gaza, but
a senior Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it would be
a "one-way ticket."
The Palestinians have made so much progress that the Bush administration may
resume direct aid to the Palestinian Authority - with a big boost to help
strengthen its security forces.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Tuesday that "circumstances have
changed" and specifically pointed to the Palestinians' new finance minister,
Salam Fayad.
Left behind in Ramallah as Abbas traveled to Jerusalem, Arafat told
reporters, "We hope that they will continue with implementation of the road map
plan, which means complete withdrawal from all Palestinian lands."
However, there were many misgivings and suspicions left over from previous
failed attempts to stop the violence and move toward peace.
The chief of Israel's Shin Bet security service, Avi Dichter, said Tuesday
that Israel would withdraw from other West Bank towns only if Palestinian police
begin disarming Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other violent groups in the Gaza Strip.
"We will not move on to transfer responsibility for the West Bank before it
becomes totally clear that in Gaza the process of disarming terror groups has
begun," Dichter told a symposium at Tel Aviv University.
Abbas opposes the use of force against militias because he fears it could
trigger a civil war. He suggested Tuesday that illegal weapons would not be
confiscated, but that Palestinian police would try to persuade militiamen not to
use them.
"The misuse of weapons must be prevented through dialogue and agreement, not
through internal war," Abbas said in an address to the Palestinian parliament on
Tuesday.
Israeli officials said Sharon insisted in his talks with Abbas that violent
groups be dismantled, in line with the road map.
Despite the truce announcement, a Palestinian man opened fire at a West Bank
checkpoint Tuesday and was killed by troops, the military said. There was no
claim of responsibility.