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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
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- From: Ofer Inbar <cos%chaos.cs.brandeis.edu@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Subject: Israel Line 07-20-92 (fwd)
- Message-ID: <1992Jul21.183634.774@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: Brandeis University Computer Science
- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Tue, 21 Jul 1992 18:36:34 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 147
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- Forwarded message:
- Date: Mon, 20 Jul 92 19:04:10 -0400
- Comment: Israel press clippings via the Israel Consulate
- Reply-To: <israeline@nysernet.ORG>
- From: saar@nysernet.ORG (Gideon Saar)
- To: Multiple recipients of list <israeline@nysernet.ORG>
- Subject: Israel Line 07-20-92
-
- Attention Israel Line Recipients
-
- Monday, July 20, 1992
-
-
- Baker and Palestinians Meet, Discuss Peace Process
-
- Israel Radio, KOL YISRAEL, reports that U.S. Secretary of State
- James Baker, currently in Israel, sat in a closed meeting with a
- Palestinian delegation today, but neither Mr. Baker nor the
- Palestinians would publicly discuss any details of their meeting.
- A press conference on the meeting will be held today in eastern
- Jerusalem. In a memo submitted to Baker, the Palestinian
- representatives requested that prominent Palestinian Faisal
- Husseini join the negotiating team as a representative of East
- Jerusalem. They also listed a number of steps needed to help
- develop mutual trust between the Israelis and Palestinians. These
- included freeing people under administrative detention and
- improving the status of human rights in the Territories. In Jordan,
- Amman Radio reports that Baker demanded Palestinian flexibility
- now that Israel has changed its position regarding settlements in
- the Territories. According to Jordanian Radio, the Palestinian
- representatives complained to Baker that Israel's shifting of
- positions regarding the settlements is not enough to open the
- deadlock reached in the peace process.
-
-
- Review of Multilateral Talks
-
- Israel Radio, KOL YISRAEL, reports on talks held in Jerusalem today
- between top Foreign Ministry officials and senior assistants to
- U.S. Secretary of State James Baker. The discussion included a
- review of the multilateral negotiations. According to the U.S.,
- there was a good deal of progress in the three multilateral working
- groups in which Israel participated, namely, the groups dealing
- with the water problem, the environment, and arms control. However,
- they noted, there was a stalemate in the meetings on the refugee
- problem and economic cooperation, which Israel did not attend.
-
-
- Israeli Government Negates Establishment of Settlements Not Yet
- Under Constraction
-
- Today's DAVAR reports on yesterday's decision by the Israeli
- Government to cancel the building of new settlements, commissioned
- by previous governments, which are not yet under construction.
- Although the announcement does not mention them explicitly,
- according to DAVAR, it refers to the over twenty settlements in the
- Territories which the various Likud-led governments decided to
- build. In addition, settlements within the Green Line, which were
- approved by past governments but which have not yet been built,
- will need new approval if they want to begin construction. DAVAR
- adds that apparently the communities inside the Green Line will not
- encounter much difficulty getting approval. According to Director-
- General of the Ministry of Construction and Housing, Aryeh Bar, a
- decision to freeze the building of new roads in the Territories is
- expected, following the freezing of construction in existing
- settlemts in the Territories last week and the decision of the
- Government yesterday to freeze the construction of new settlements.
- Bar says that in the case of roads, too, a distinction will be
- made between roads with security value, which will continue to be
- built, and other roads.
-
-
- Egyptian Source: Mubarak May Propose Cairo as Site for Bilateral
- Negotiations
-
- Today's HA'ARETZ reports that in their meeting tomorrow, Egypt's
- President Husni Mubarak may propose to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
- that the city of Cairo act as the permanent site for the peace
- talks between Israel and the Arabs. He may also offer his own
- assistance with the bilateral negotiations on a continual basis,
- should they flounder. HA'ARETZ quoted an official Egyptian source
- on that information. Besides the doubt whether Israel will agree to
- this proposal, it is not clear whether the Syrians, Lebanese and
- Palestinians will agree to such an arrangement. The Arab parties in
- the bilateral talks have refused, so far, to transfer the site of
- negotiations to the region, in order to avoid handing Israel
- anything which may be interpreted as normalization before it has
- "paid" for it with land. Nevertheless, it seems as if President
- Mubarak intends to persuade Syrian President Hafez Assad, who will
- arrive in Cairo after Rabin's visit, that this must be done in
- order to satisfy the Americans, who are looking for a gesture from
- the Arab side. The newspaper adds that Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
- is expected to arrive tomorrow at Cairo's International Airport.
-
-
- Prominent Palestinians Leave for Meeting of Arab Foreign Ministers
-
- Israel Radio, KOL YISRAEL, reports this morning that prominent
- Palestinians, Faisal el-Husseini, Dr. Heidar Abdelshafi and Dr.
- Saib Arikat, will leave on Wednesday to Amman en-route to Damascus
- to participate in the discussions held by the Foreign Ministers of
- Arab countries. The radio notes that this is the first time that
- Palestinian representatives are leaving to participate in an
- enlarged forum of foreign ministers of the Arab states. Among those
- attending the meetings will be foreign ministers of Morocco, Saudi
- Arabia and Egypt.
-
-
- Spiritual Leaders Discuss Yahadut Hatorah's Joining Coalition
-
- Israel Radio, KOL YISRAEL, reports that Rabbi Shach and the Great
- Rabbi from Gur are meeting today to determine future steps to be
- taken by the Yahadut Hatorah party. They are continuing their
- search for a formula that will allow the Yahadut Hatorah party to
- join the Labor-led coalition. Though still outside the coalition,
- a dispute is evolving between the Yahadut Hatorah and Shas parties
- on the post of Deputy mMnister in the Ministry of Education.
- Yahadut Hatorah says that once it joins the Government, it will
- request that a deputy minister from its own party be part of the
- ultra-Orthodox education administration. According to the radio,
- this prospect brought a lot of anger in the Shas party.
-
-
- IDF to Recommend Stopping Expulsions of Palestinians
-
- Today's AL HAMISHMAR reports that the Israel Defense Forces will
- present the issue of expelling Palestinians from the Territories to
- Prime Minister Rabin. They will suggest rethinking the issue and
- recommend Israel stop using the measure of expulsion in the future
- because of the present political climate in the Territories. IDF
- sources mentioned that there have been expulsion orders since
- January of this year for 11 Palestinians living in the West Bank
- and the Gaza Strip. They noted that for the past seven months,
- legal proceedings in the appeals of these expulsions have not yet
- been concluded. The IDF said that the security authorities must
- reach an agreement with these 11 Palestinians in order to prevent
- the projected negative reactions to their expulsions. They said
- that the policy of expulsion does not have a place in the effort
- towards autonomy in the Territories.
-
-
- Today's Israel Line was prepared by Gideon Sa'ar, Tamar Kaplan and
- Robert Socolof.
-
- ----------
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