A surprise
decision by the Palestinian leadership to sign more than a dozen
international conventions giving it greater leverage against Israel left the United States struggling to put peace talks back on track. U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry canceled a visit to the de facto Palestinian capital, Ramallah,
planned for Wednesday after President Mahmoud Abbas made the
announcement on Tuesday in a meeting of senior officials of the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). "My
team is on the ground meeting with the parties even tonight. We urge
both sides to show restraint while we work with them," Kerry told
reporters in Brussels, where he was attending a ministerial meeting of
NATO. He noted that Abbas said in his statements that he would be in
touch with the Americans Tuesday evening. "The
important thing is to keep the process moving and find a way to see
whether the parties are prepared to move forward. In the end this is up
to the parties," he added. The
U.S.-backed talks, which are nearing their scheduled end after starting
in July, veered toward crisis on Saturday when Israel did not follow
through on the promised release of a group of over two dozen
long-serving Palestinian prisoners. Israel
said it wanted a pledge from the Palestinian leadership that the talks,
which have not made any obvious progress, would be extended before the
detainees were freed. The
Palestinians balked and said Israel's reneging on the release freed them
from a commitment they had made to the Americans last year not to
confront Israel at the United Nations and other international bodies. The
agreements signed on Tuesday, officials said, included the Geneva
Conventions - the key text of international law on the conduct of war
and occupation. Palestinians hope
it will give them a stronger basis to appeal to the International
Criminal Court and eventually lodge formal complaints against Israel for its continued occupation of lands seized in the 1967 war. Describing
the move as a response to Israel's own violation of pledges it made to
carry on the talks, Palestinian officials held out hope that it would
not scupper the process entirely. "I
don't see that the Palestinians had anything else to do. What are they
expected to do? They waited one day, two days, and there was no sign (of
a prisoner release)," top negotiator Mohammed Shtayyeh told Reuters. "Going
to some U.N. agencies does not mean it is stopping the process, but we
need a serious partner ... for us it's a matter of dignity, Palestinian
dignity," he added.
Palestinians sign international conventions to press Israel; U.S. hopes to keep talks going
Reuters
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