Palestine 1998 Calendar
| Jan | Feb
| March | April
| May | June
| July | August
| Sep | Oct
| Nov | Dec
|
January 1998
On 4'th of
January , Israel's Foreign Minister David Levy announced his
resignation , accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of ignore the
social fundamentals of Israeli society . The resignation puts intense
political pressure on Netanyahu's conservative government and threatens
to
make an end to his administration. The main dispute between Levy and
Netanyahu was the 1998 budget, which Levy claim it ignores the plight
of
Israel's low-income class.
On 6'th of
January , U.S. envoy Dennis Ross held talks with Palestinian
Authority President Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, the mission aimes mainly for preparing the ground for
meetings
in Washington in 20th of this month, when President Clinton is to hold
separate talks on the stalled Middle East peace process with Netanyahu
and
Arafat. Ross focus on four point : 1. A "significant and credible"
Israeli
troop redeployment . 2. The US expects Netanyahu to present plans for a
pullout . 3. Israel to work with Palestinians to honor past peace
pledges
4. Arafat to set up a program to ensure security for Israelis .
On 14'th of
January , Israel's Cabinet issued a document calling for
Palestinian authority to adhere with numerous conditions in order to
move
forward with the peace process . Some of this conditions include , a
crackdown on guerrilla activity , a reduction in the size of the
Palestinian police force, and the revision of anti-Israeli clauses in
the
charter of the PLO.
On 18'th of
January , Israeli Cabinet delays West Bank land decision ,
Israel said it would delay the decision on a ceiling of the maximum
amount
of West Bank land it would turn over to the Palestinians and troop
redeployment until after 20th on January summit in Washington between
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Bill
Clinton.
The Israeli statement added that the withdrawal would only take place
if
the Palestinians fulfill their obligations.
On 20'th of
January , President Bill Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu met in Washington and failed to come up with a new
strategy to move ahead with the implementation of limited Palestinian
autonomy. US Sources said that the meeting went extremely well.
Netanyahu
said No agreement has yet been formulated .
On 20'th of January , For the second time, Netanyahu met with President
Clinton to discuss the stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace process. US
Sources said that meeting was good and intensive , but did not result
in a
breakthrough. Clinton made proposals to bridge the gap between Israeli
and
Palestinian, included suggestions on the timing and scope of troop
withdrawals from the West Bank.
On 21'st of
January , Palestinian President Yasser Arafat arrived in
Washington Wednesday to hold talks with president Bill Clinton . Arafat
met
Albright and planned to meet President Bill Clinton for talks Thursday
at
the White House. Albright told Arafat he needs to be realistic about
the
extent of a further Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank. Palestinians
have called for a 30 percent pullback, which is far more than Israel is
ready to give to the Palestinians.
On 22'nd of
January , Clinton held two long meetings with Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat . Clinton introduced the concept of parallel
processes of implementation of both parties commitments , Israel to
carry
out credible and significant withdrawal from the West Bank and the
Palestinian to moves against guerrilla activity .
February 1998
02.02.1998 ,
Israel and the Palestinian Authority will reportedly send
envoys to the U.S. next week for a new round of talks on the Mid-East
peace
process.
06.02.1998 , A
young Israeli was stabbed early Friday in Jerusalem's walled
Old City, police said. The attacker escaped into the narrow alleys of
the
Old City. A number of Palestinian suspects were arrested.
10.02.1998 ,
Israel expanding settlements amid Palestinian anger While the
world's attention is focused on the looming crisis over Iraq,
Palestinians
say the Israeli government has seized the moment to annex Palestinian
lands
and expand Jewish settlements, often without compensation.
25.02.1998 ,
Israeli troops searched refugee camps in the West Bank Tuesday
night and arrested six Palestinians on suspicion of attackes aginst
Israel
an army spokeswoman said. "In the course of the operation six
Palestinians
were arrested on suspicion of participation in attackes against
security
forces and Israeli civilians," the spokeswoman said. The searches
coincided
with the anniversary on Wednesday of the massacre of 29 Palestinians by
a
Jewish settler in a Hebron mosque in 1994.
March 1998
11.03.1998 ,
Israeli soldiers shot and killed three Palestinians at an army
checkpoint near the West Bank town of Hebron Tuesday, a Palestinian
doctor
and Israeli security sources said. Israeli military sources claims the
Palestinians driving a vehicle had tried to run down troops manning the
checkpoint. "The Palestinian car came and tried to hit a soldier at the
checkpoint and to go through the checkpoint. They succeeded in hitting
one
of our soldiers at the checkpoint and he is lightly wounded," one
source
said.
11.03.1998 , Palestinians threw stones at Israeli soldiers and burned
tires
in the West Bank town of Hebron Wednesday to protest the killing of
three
Arab laborers by Israeli troops on Tuesday. Israeli soldiers fired
rubber
bullets at the protesters. Witnesses say the trouble took place near
the
entrance to Dura, the village where the funerals of the three
Palestinians
are to take place Wednesday afternoon.
12.03.1998 , The
Israeli military has announced that West Bank commander
Major General Uzi Dayan will release the three soldiers arrested in
connection with the shooting deaths of three Palestinians in the West
Bank
Tuesday. A military spokeswoman said Army investigators are continuing
their inquiry into the incident and that the three soldiers are still
under
investigation but there is insufficient evidence to continue holding
them
in custody.
12.03.1998 , Clashes flared on the West Bank Wednesday as thousands of
mourners buried three Palestinian laborers killed by Israeli troops.
Witnesses said soldiers firing rubber-coated metal bullets wounded 34
Palestinians around Hebron and 10 around Ramallah during protests
against
the killings Tuesday night at an army checkpoint. Military sources said
Israeli troops throughout the Hebron area had strict orders to exercise
restraint as thousands of Palestinians streamed to Dura in cars, buses
and
trucks for the funeral and assembled on roadsides and rooftops.
13.03.1998 , Four
Palestinians were slightly injured Friday in Jerusalem
when explosives detonated near a market stall on the Nablus Road in the
eastern part of the city. Injured were taken to nearby hospitals and
Israeli soldiers combed the area for signs of further explosives.
Tension
was already high in the West Bank where Israeli security forces were
reinforced following the violent protests of recent days. Hundreds of
additional police were on duty in Jerusalem.
13.03.1998 , Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian
President
Yasser Arafat sought to calm the West Bank and vowed to work toward
peace.
Netanyahu, in an interview with Israel Television's Arabic service,
called
the killings at an Israeli military checkpoint a "tragic mistake" and
offered condolences to the victims' families. In Gaza, Arafat said he
hoped
the tensions would not affect peace moves.
14.03.1998 , At
least seven Palestinians were wounded in clashes Friday
between Palestinians and Israeli soldiers and settlers in the West Bank
town of Hebron, witnesses said. The violence flared hours after a bomb
went
off near Jerusalem's Old City, wounding four Palestinians fanning more
tension following violent clashes over the killings this week of three
Palestinian workers by Israeli troops. The witnesses said armed
settlers
threw stones at homes of Palestinians and beat Arabs in a neighborhood
in
the Israeli-controlled part of the town, injuring at least two
Palestinians.
17.03.1998 ,
Israel and Britain agreed Monday that British Foreign
Secretary Robin Cook will visit a controversial Jewish settlement
project
in Arab East Jerusalem accompanied by an Israeli, not Palestinian,
delegation. "He's going to visit now...," Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's aide said. Israel had earlier threatened to exclude the
European Union from Middle East peacemaking if Cook went ahead with the
visit to Har Homa settlement on a site at the edge of East Jerusalem
known
in Arabic as Jabal Abu Ghneim.
18.03.1998 ,
Israeli opposition leaders say Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu made a mistake by turning British Foreign Secretary Robin
Cook's
meeting with a Palestinian official at a disputed housing project into
a
diplomatic incident. Cook was snubbed by Netanyahu after the meeting.
The
prime minister called off a scheduled dinner and a joint press
conference.
Labor leaders Haim Ramon and Yossi Beilin criticized Netanyahu's
actions
before meeting Cook for breakfast. Cook is now in Syria.
19.03.1998 ,
British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook completed his tour of the
Mideast on Wednesday by calling on Israel to honor a 20-year-old U.N.
resolution demanding its withdrawal from Lebanon. Cook flew to Beirut
from
Damascus, Syria, on the eve of the 20th anniversary of U.N. Security
Council Resolution 425, which called on the Israelis to leave Lebanon.
Israel invaded Lebanon in 1978 to drive back Palestinian guerrillas and
holds an enclave in the southern part of the country.
19.03.1998 , Israel called a halt Wednesday to a diplomatic dispute
over a
hotly contested visit by British Foreign Secretary of State Robin Cook
to
the site of a Jewish settlement project in Jerusalem. "I think we can
go on
from here and put things behind us," a senior aide to Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said. Britain's embassy to Israel in Tel Aviv
sounded a
similar note. Cook infuriated Netanyahu Tuesday by surveying the
building
site on the edge of Arab East Jerusalem, known in Hebrew as Har Homa
and as
Jabal Abu Ghneim in Arabic, to show EU disapproval of Jewish settlement
expansion on occupied land.
20.03.1998 ,
Israel said Thursday the United States had offered ideas for
breaking a year-old deadlock in Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking and an
Israeli newspaper said Washington might go public with them as early as
next week. Ha'aretz newspaper said U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright would invite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat to separate meetings in Europe,
where
she would explain the plan before publicizing it, to try to get them to
accept it. In Cairo, visiting U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said he
had
no plans to offer an alternative to U.S. peace-brooking in the region.
23.03.1998 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his cabinet
ministers are in unanimous opposition to a reported U.S. proposal
calling
for Israel to withdrawal from 13 percent of the West Bank. This figure
which has been mentioned in the news media, "13 percent, is
unacceptable,
and ... damaging to the security interests of the State of Israel,"
Cabinet
Secretary Danny Naveh told reporters.
24.03.1998 , A
representative of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
said on Tuesday that Israel could relinquish control of no more than a
further nine percent of the West Bank, less then a new American
initiative
that reportedly sought a 13 percent pullback. Netanyahu said on Monday
Israel alone would determine the extent of a long-delayed West Bank
pullback based on its security needs.
27.03.1998 ,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday rejected a U.S.
proposal for Israeli soldiers to withdraw from 13 percent of the West
Bank.
Israel is reportedly willing to give no more than 9 percent of West
Bank
territory to the Palestinian Authority. Netanyahu, however, said his
government was willing to hand over more desirable land. "The only
thing we
are considering is the quality of the land vs. the quantity," he told
reporters.
27.03.1998 , Israel took a tough line on a troop pullback from the West
Bank on Thursday as U.S. presidential envoy Dennis Ross headed in on a
critical bid to shore up crumbling Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking. "I
can't accept a dictate," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Israel
Radio in an interview. "We have our principles. We're not deceiving
anyone,
not ourselves, not the voters, not the Palestinians and not the
Americans."
Ross was due to arrive later Thursday armed with U.S. proposals that
are
reported to call for an Israeli troop withdrawal from 13.1% of the West
Bank in return for Palestinian steps to fight Islamic militant
attackes.
28.03.1998 , U.S.
presidential envoy Dennis Ross held four hours of talks
Friday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a new bid to
break
a deadlock on handing more West Bank land to the Palestinians. Neither
Ross, warned by Israel not to dictate a peace deal, nor Netanyahu,
under
pressure from hardliners in his government not to relinquish more
territory, made any comment to reporters before or after the meeting at
the
prime minister's office. Ross had been widely expected to present U.S.
proposals which reports said called for an Israeli pullback from 13.1%
of
the West Bank in return for Palestinian steps to fight Muslim militant
attackes.
29.03.1998 , The
Egyptian government reportedly has urged Palestinian
Authority President Yasser Arafat not to reject a U.S. peace
initiative,
although both the Israeli and Palestinian Cabinets have voted against
it.
Under the plan, Israel would cede 13.1 percent of the West Bank to the
Palestinians over 12 weeks. The Palestinians have said they want 30
percent. Israel said it won't release more than 9 percent, because that
figure does not compromise national security.
30.03.1998 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held two hours of
talks with U.S. envoy Dennis Ross Sunday night, stating that no West
Bank
troop pullbacks will be made without Palestinian security pledges. When
they finished, Ross headed to Gaza for talks with Palestinian leader
Yasser
Arafat, who declined to answer questions about whether any progress had
been achieved. Ross said talks with both leaders had been "thorough"
and
that he would return to Washington to report on the talks.
31.03.1998 , A
U.S. diplomatic offensive to rescue Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations neared its end on a bleak note Monday, with presidential
envoy
Dennis Ross citing diminishing hopes for Middle East peace. "Obviously
the
stalemate begins to diminish the hopes...," Ross said at the Egyptian
resort of Sharm el-Sheikh after briefing President Hosni Mubarak.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also sounded a pessimistic note over
the
ability of the latest U.S. shuttle diplomacy to break the year-long
peace
freeze. The United States was reportedly seeking an Israeli pullback
from
13.1% of the West Bank, a figure Israel says is "unacceptable" and
compromises its security interests.
31.03.1998 , Palestinian youths clashed with Israeli troops Monday as
thousands of Arabs staged protests in Israel and the West Bank against
land
confiscation, witnesses said. Soldiers fired rubber-coated metal
bullets at
protesters in several trouble spots in the West Bank, wounding three
Palestinians. More than 10,000 Israeli-Arabs marched to Arrabeh village
in
northern Israel chanting "Long live Palestine." "Land Day represents
for us
a day of struggle for all Palestinians, particularly Palestinians in
Israel
who struggle against continuous government attempts to confiscate our
land," said one protester.
April 1998
01.04.1998 ,
Israel made an unexpected offer Tuesday to discuss with the
Palestinians a third pullback on the contested West Bank. The move gave
a
slight boost Tuesday to the U.S. government's efforts to reopen
negotiations between the two sides. The offer by Prime Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu to U.S. mediator Dennis B. Ross near the end of Ross' fourth
day
of shuttle diplomacy in the area. U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright reported "some progress" in the year-long deadlock in the
peace
process.
02.04.1998 , A
funeral procession for the chief Hamas bomb maker on
Thursday in the West Bank included thousands of enraged Palestinians
chanting "revenge, revenge" and shaking their fists. Islamic militants
say
that Mohiyedine Sharif, who topped Israel's most-wanted list, was
assassinated by Israel. Israel has denied involvement and said Sharif
died
when a car bomb exploded prematurely in a Hamas bomb factory. Hamas
dismissed Israel's denial, and on Thursday threatened to carry out
attacks
in Israel.
03.04.1998 ,
Thousands of Palestinians buried a master bombmaker from the
Muslim militant group Hamas Thursday with calls for attacks on Israel.
Mourners paraded Muhyideen al-Sharif's body, wrapped in a blanket on a
stretcher, through the streets of El-Bireh while veiled women ululated
with
joy at the death a "martyr" of Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen
al-Qassam Brigades. "Dear, dear Qassam, hit Tel Aviv!" the crowd
chanted.
Away from the funeral, Palestinian youths hurled stones at Israeli
troops,
who fired tear gas and rubber bullets.
04.04.1998 ,
Shouting for revenge against Israel, thousands of Palestinian
demonstrators in the West Bank and Gaza vented their rage Friday over
the
mysterious death of a Muslim militant master bomber. "Dear Qassam, blow
up
Tel Aviv," crowds chanted, demanding the military wing of the
fundamentalist Hamas group avenge Muhyideen al-Sharif. Israel rushed to
head off revenge attacks, sending Ami Ayalon, its top secret service
official, to tell Palestinian President Yasser Arafat in Gaza that
Israelis
had nothing to do with the death of "The Engineer 2," political sources
said.
06.04.1998 , A
Palestinian inquiry has determined that Hamas master bomb
maker Muhyideen al-Sharif was killed in a power struggle within the
militant Muslim group, Palestinian officials said Monday. The
investigation
ordered by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat cleared Israel, which
had
denied killing Sharif, of responsibility for the mysterious death. But
Hamas rejected the findings as lies and renewed promises to launch
revenge
attacks against Israel. Israeli officials have said such strikes would
kill
chances of breaking a year-long peacemaking deadlock with the
Palestinian
Authority.
06.04.1998 , At least one suspect has been arrested by Palestinian
police
in the death of the chief Hamas bomb maker who died under mysterious
circumstances last month, a source close to the investigation said
Monday.
The investigation also uncovered large amounts of explosives and a bomb
factory, the source said on condition of anonymity. The findings of the
investigation are to be made public later in the day. Mohiyedine
Sharif,
32, was found dead March 29 near the scene of a car bomb explosion in a
garage.
07.04.1998 ,
Israel, already on high alert after the death of a Hamas
master bomb maker, beefed up security in Jerusalem Tuesday for fear of
possible violence after police shot dead a Palestinian man in a late
night
car chase. Israeli police said they shot dead Bilal al-Salaymeh late
Monday
after he refused to stop his vehicle and tried to outrun two patrol
cars in
a chase along a road from Jerusalem to the Palestinian-ruled town of
Ramallah. The victim's family disputed the police account. Monday
night's
shooting added fuel to a volatile situation and police feared
Palestinian
violence could erupt.
08.04.1998 ,
Hundreds of Palestinians took part in a march yesterday in
Jerusalem as part of the funeral proceedings for Bilal al-Salaymeh, a
Palestinian who was shot by Israeli police Monday. Al-Salaymeh's family
says he was shot after stopping his car, while Israeli officials say he
was
shot while trying to elude police who were pursuing him.
08.04.1998 , The military wing of the Muslim militant group Hamas urged
Muslims and Arabs around the world Wednesday to attack Jewish targets
to
avenge the death of a bomb maker whose killing it has blamed on Israel.
"We
call on all the free and honorable sons of our Palestinian people
and...all
those who care about Palestine...to level and aim attacks against
Jewish
and Zionist interests which have been spreading all over the world,"
the
Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades said. The group repeated its dismissal
of
the findings of a Palestinian Authority investigation released Monday
that
said bomb maker Muhyideen al-Sharif was killed by other members of
Hamas.
09.04.1998 , The
militant Islamic group Hamas yesterday released a video
warning of retaliatory action in Israel for the death of the group's
master
bomb maker, Muhyideen al-Sharif. Israel has denied involvement in
al-Sharif's death, and Palestinian officials say he was killed by other
members of Hamas.
09.04.1998 , The Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Islamic militant
group
Hamas Thursday escalated a war of words over the mysterious killing of
Hamas bombmaker Muhyideen al-Sharif. A senior advisor to Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat threatened to detain Hamas leaders if they
continued to publicly reject the findings of a inquiry by the Authority
which said Sharif was killed in an internal Hamas feud. Sharif, who was
accused by Israel of masterminding a string of martyr bombings, was
found
dead on March 29 beside a car that blew up in the Palestinian-ruled
West
Bank town of Ramallah. Israel has repeatedly denied any involvement.
10.04.1998 ,
Palestinian officials announced Thursday they arrested Hamas
leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi after the group issued a leaflet demanding
the
resignation of officials in Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority.
Palestinian police chief Ghazi Jibali said Rantisi was being held at a
Gaza
police station. "Rantisi has been taken for questioning regarding
statements made against our national interests and the Palestinian
Authority," Jibali said. He did not say when Rantisi would be released.
13.04.1998 ,
Palestinian police released Monday a senior member of the
Islamic Jihad group who was jailed in Gaza Friday after he criticized
the
Palestinian Authority's arrest of other Moslem militants, relatives
said. A
Palestinian security official said Abdallah al-Shami had been arrested
because he had criticized the arrest of several Moslem militants in a
crackdown following the death of Hamas master bombmaker Muhyideen
al-Sharif
in the West Bank on March 29. The Palestinian Authority arrested
several
key figures from the militant Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas in
connection with Sharif's death.
15.04.1998 , A
Palestinian held without trial in Israel for more than five
years was released from prison Wednesday after making a pledge of
non-violence on Israeli television. Ahmed Katamesh, suspected but never
charged by Israel with membership of a "terrorist" organization, was
the
longest-serving of its "administrative detainees," who are jailed for
renewable six-month terms by the military. Israeli TV news broadcasts
showed Katamesh taking a pledge of non-violence that it said had
secured
his release from Damon prison in northern Israel, where he had been
held
since Sept. 1, 1992.
18.04.1998 ,
Palestinian factions Friday called on the Muslim militant
group Hamas to cooperate with the Palestinian Authority's inquiry into
the
killing of master bomber Muhyideen al-Sharif. The factions, urging an
easing of tension among Palestinians, also demanded that Hamas stop
issuing
leaflets and media statements accusing the Authority of collaborating
with
Israel in Sharif's death. Jamal Zakout, coordinator of 12 national and
Islamic factions, said the Palestinian Authority had decided
unilaterally
to refrain from issuing media statements on its investigation into the
killing.
20.04.1998 ,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Monday the United
States would invite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat to peace talks in London on May 4.
"The
United States, we understand, has said or is going to say shortly they
will
invite both the president of the Palestinians and the government of
Israel
to bilateral meetings in London on the fourth of May," Blair told a
news
conference in Gaza. Arafat responded positively, saying: "We welcome
this
invitation." He said he wanted a meeting with Israel in which the
United
States and the Europeans would participate.
20.04.1998 , Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly
agreed to attend Mid-East peace talks in London after meeting this
weekend
with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Blair is expected to seek
Palestinian agreement to attend the talks when he meets with
Palestinian
leaders today.
21.04.1998 ,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu met Tuesday to discuss the agenda for planned talks
in
London next month to revive the stalled Mideast peace process. The two
leaders met over breakfast in Tel Aviv. "The point is to make
significant
progress and move to the core issues to facilitate a final settlement,"
Netanyahu told reporters. The May 4 summit will be monitored by U.S.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who will meet separately with
Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
22.04.1998 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak conferred Wednesday on efforts to save the Middle East
peace
process, officials said. U.S. envoy Dennis Ross will visit Israel and
Palestinian areas at the end of this week in a fresh attempt to break a
deadlock. He will meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Arafat. Arafat arrived in the Egyptian capital Tuesday, where he met
King
Fahd on U.S. and European efforts to revive the peace process. Arafat
did
not speak to reporters after meeting Mubarak.
24.04.1998 , U.S.
Middle East peace envoy Dennis Ross expects to pin down
precisely how much West Bank land Israel will cede to Palestinians in
talks
starting this weekend, a U.S. official said Friday. Ross' talks are
intended to pave the way for separate meetings by U.S. Secretary of
State
Madeleine Albright with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat May 4 in London. "We would like to
see
an answer in time for the May 4 meeting. Obviously, Ross and (Assistant
Secretary of State Martin) Indyk are preparing for the May 4 meetings,"
said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
24.04.1998 , Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened
Thursday
to annex parts of the West Bank if Palestinian President Yasser Arafat
unilaterally declares an independent Palestinian state. "It would be a
mistake twice over," Netanyahu said in an interview broadcast Thursday
when
asked about Arafat's warning that he would declare statehood if the
sides
failed to reach a permanent Israeli-Palestinian peace accord by May
1999.
26.04.1998 ,
Demonstrators great Ross's motorcade at Netanyahu's residence
Two senior U.S. officials on Saturday made another attempt to revive
Mideast peace talks. U.S. envoy Dennis Ross and Assistant Secretary of
State Martin Indyk entered talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu shortly after their arrival in Jerusalem. Meanwhile, the
militant
Islamic group Hamas staged a rally in the West Bank town of Hebron.
Marchers vowed revenge against Israel for last month's death of the
group's
chief bomb maker.
28.04.1998 ,
Israeli President Ezer Weizman met yesterday with Palestinian
negotiators in Jerusalem to discuss efforts aimed at re-starting the
Mid-East peace process.
29.04.1998 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, backed by Jordan and
Egypt, urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday to
accept
a U.S. peacemaking initiative in key London talks next week. Both
Arafat
and Netanyahu will have separate talks in London Monday with Secretary
of
State Madeleine Albright, who is trying to break a more than year-old
logjam in negotiations she says are "going around in circles."
Washington
wants Israel to withdraw from 13% of West Bank land in a further hand
over
of territory under interim peace deals in exchange for tougher steps by
Arafat to deter violence.
30.04.1998 , With
triumphant blasts from ceremonial rams' horns and
explosions of fireworks, Israel officially kicked off its 50th
anniversary
celebration Wednesday evening and threw a nationwide party that was
still
going strong Thursday. The celebration is to climax with Jubilee
Chimes, an
elaborate entertainment showcase at a Jerusalem stadium. U.S. Vice
President Al Gore will be on hand to represent Americans at the event.
May 1998
01.05.98 ,
Israeli and Palestinian leaders exchanged blame Friday for a
year long impasse over the scope of an Israeli troop withdrawal from
the
West Bank, ahead of key talks in London next week. Prime Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said they hoped the
London talks would lead to an agreement on a long-delayed Israeli
withdrawal despite the gaps between their positions. Secretary of State
Madeline Albright is scheduled to hold separate meetings with Netanyahu
and
Arafat in London Monday in a bid to revive negotiations.
04.05.98 ,
Crucial Middle East peace talks went into overtime Monday with
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright staying in London for a
second
round of separate meetings with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders.
American and Palestinian officials said there was no sign of a
breakthrough, but the fact that both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat both arranged to
spend
another night in London raised hopes of progress. Albright spent five
hours
trying to persuade Netanyahu to accept U.S. proposals which diplomats
said
centered on handing over a further 13% of occupied West Bank land to
the
Palestinians in exchange for tougher security
05.05.98 , The
United States is tightening the screws on hardline Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a determined effort to revive
long-stalled Middle East peace negotiations. After two days of indirect
talks in London, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright announced that
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat had accepted U.S. proposals for
rescuing the peace process and challenged Israel to do the same. She
dangled the prospect of a three-way meeting with President Clinton in
Washington on May 11 to launch talks on the final status of the West
Bank
and Gaza Strip if Netanyahu agrees to hand over another 13% of occupied
land to Palestinian rule now.
06.05.98 , Talks
between U.S. Sec. of State Madeleine Albright, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Yasser
Arafat
ended in London yesterday with no progress on Mideast peace talks
having
been made. U.S. President Bill Clinton has invited the Mideast leaders
to
Washington for talks next week on the condition that Israel accept a
U.S.
plans for the return of more of the West Bank to Palestinian control.
A Jewish seminary student was stabbed to death in Jerusalem and a
Jewish
settler in the West Bank shot dead a Palestinian attacker in separate
incidents Wednesday. In a morning attack, the seminary student on was
stabbed in Jerusalem's Old City and police blamed Palestinian
militants.
Later Wednesday, a Jewish settler shot a Palestinian man who attacked
him
with a knife at the West Bank settlement of Eli . The latest killings
took
place a day after U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright failed in
talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders to break 14 months of
deadlock
in peace negotiations
07.05.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday that he
may turn down an invitation to visit the U.S. next week if doing so
would
imply Israel's "bowing to U.S. dictates" concerning the Mid-East peace
process.
08.05.98 , U.S.
Middle East envoy Dennis Ross met Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday, hoping to arrange a White House summit
for
Monday and break a 14-month-old Middle East peace deadlock. Their
meeting
at the prime minister's office, closed to news media, lasted little
more
than an hour, Netanyahu's spokesman Shai Bazak said. Neither man spoke
to
reporters immediately afterward. Ross was expected to stay in Israel.
Only
hours before Ross arrived Friday, aides to Netanyahu rejected a U.S.
backed
proposal for Israel to hand over 13% more of the West Bank to
Palestinian
rule.
11.05.98 , U.S.
special envoy Dennis Ross returned to Washington today
after failing to persuade Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
attend a Mid-East peace summit in the U.S. the U.S. had set the return
of
control of more of the West Bank to Palestinians as a condition for the
talks, which were to be held today.
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat Monday accused Israel of trying to
humiliate the U.S. administration by refusing President Clinton's
invitation to hold urgent peace talks. Arafat called on the United
States
and the international community as parties to the Oslo peace accord to
put
pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept an
American
compromise plan in a land-for-peace deal.
12.05.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is scheduled to meet
with U.S. Sec. of State Madeleine Albright in Washington tomorrow to
continue ongoing efforts aimed at re-starting the Mid-East peace
process.
The founder of Hamas has declared that the militant Palestinian group
will
continue fighting Israel, Kuwaiti newspapers said Tuesday. "Certainly
we
will continue military operations. As long as Israel remains on our
land,
we will continue the armed struggle," the Arab Times daily quoted
Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin as saying. Yassin is in Kuwait as part of a regional tour.
He
described the Oslo peace accords as "unfair and unbalanced" and said
they
were "imposing conditions of the strong on the weak," al-Rai al-Aam
newspaper said. Hamas opposes Israeli-Palestinian peace moves, calling
them
a sell-out.
13.05.98 ,
Israeli and Palestinian historians met in Paris Wednesday to
seek common ground between wildly divergent views of what happened when
the
first Arab-Israeli war erupted 50 years ago this week. The central
question
was why up to 800,000 Palestinians left their homes during the
fighting.
Although the historians quickly disagreed on reasons for the exodus,
they
hailed the importance of their meeting, possibly the first public one
of
its kind. Some said it portended reconciliation between peoples, if and
when their leaders reached a peace settlement.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came to Washington Wednesday
to
lobby against the U.S. Middle East peace plan, as Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright prepared to try to sell it to him. Albright issued a
"wake-up call" to Israeli and Palestinian leaders to make compromises
before the peace process collapses, but made clear her remarks were
aimed
mainly at Israel. She said Tuesday that Washington would revive its
idea
for a Middle East summit if she could reach agreement with Netanyahu
over
the scale of the next Israeli troop withdrawal from the West Bank. The
U.S.
plan calls for 13% withdrawal, but Israel insists on a 9% pullback.
14.05.98 , U.S.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met yesterday in Washington to discuss
prospects for restarting the Mid-East peace process. further meetings
are
planned for today.
A "million man march" held by Palestinian leaders Thursday to mourn the
creation of the state of Israel turned into the bloodiest day of
violence
on the West Bank and Gaza Strip in almost two years. Israeli troops
killed
at least eight Palestinians during the protests that marked 50 years of
Palestinian exile and dispossession. Hundreds of thousands took to the
streets to vent rage and frustration fueled by a 14-month stalemate in
the
Middle East peace process.
15.05.98 , Talks
between U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington yesterday ended
with no breakthrough concerning Mid-East peace talks.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at U.N. headquarters
Friday for talks with Secretary-General Kofi Annan expected to focus on
the
Middle East in general and southern Lebanon in particular. He made no
statement to reporters as he was accompanied by U.N. officials,
including
protocol chief Nadia Younes, an Egyptian, to Annan's 38th floor suite.
Netanyahu and his party were later guests at a lunch given by the
secretary-general.
Palestinians threw rocks at Jews in Jerusalem Friday a day after
Israeli
troops shot dead nine Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza strip.
18.05.98 , U.S.
Sec. of State Madeleine Albright and Palestinian President
Yasser Arafat are scheduled to meet today in London to discuss possible
new
advances in the Mid-East peace process. unconfirmed reports from Israel
say
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has expressed his willingness
to
agree to turn over control of 13% of the West Bank to Palestinians if
plans
for a future third troop redeployment in the area are nullified.
19.05.98 , Talks
between U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and
Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat ended yesterday in London
with no progress being made on the resumption of the Mid-East peace
process.
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat accused Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu Tuesday of intentionally prolonging their peacemaking crisis.
Arafat lashed out at Netanyahu after the right-wing Israeli leader
rejected
a U.S. proposal under which Israel would hand over another 13% of the
West
Bank to the Palestinians in return for stronger moves against Muslim
militants. Israel has offered 9%, saying a deeper pullback under
interim
peace accords would jeopardize its security. "It is clear Netanyahu is
escalating in the direction against agreements and is trying to create
a
crisis," Arafat said in the self-ruled town of Bethlehem.
Israel tortures at least 850 Palestinian detainees a year, a leading
Israeli human rights group said Tuesday ahead of a court hearing on
petitions to ban violent interrogations. The B'Tselem group presented
estimates at a news conference that Israel's General Security Service
interrogates between 1,000 and 1,500 Palestinians a year. Urging Israel
to
come out of the "dark ages," B'Tselem also demonstrated the physical
pressure Israeli admits it uses against suspected guerrillas including:
placing hoods and shackles on prisoners, putting them in painful
positions,
sleep deprivation and violent shaking.
21.05.98 , Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants to resume direct
negotiations with the Palestinians and hold a summit with Yasser Arafat
to
break an impasse in negotiations, an Israeli official said today. A
senior
Palestinian negotiator, however, accused Israel of stalling tactics,
saying
there was no point to holding "meeting after meeting." "I don't think
any
talks will help any more. It's time to stop this game of process," said
Saeb Erekat, adding Israel should now accept the U.S. plan for a West
Bank
troop withdrawal. David Bar-Illan, a senior aide to Netanyahu, said
Israel
wanted to see the resumption of direct Palestinian negotiations which
have
been stalled since March 1997. He said the Israeli leader brought up
the
idea of a summit with Arafat in talks this past week with U.S. Mideast
envoy Dennis Ross.
22.05.98 ,
Israeli officials yesterday rejected a proposal for a new
Mid-East peace conference from Egypt and France.
25.05.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat called Tuesday for an Arab
summit on stalled Middle East peace efforts and said his people would
keep
striving to set up their own state. "From the house of the Arabs, I
direct
a call to convene an urgent Arab summit," Arafat said at the
Cairo-based
Arab League. He was speaking at a commemoration to mark what Arabs call
the
Nakba (Catastrophe) - the creation of Israel 50 years ago and
subsequent
expulsion of many Arabs from their homes. Arafat said he welcomed
recent
efforts to break the deadlock.
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, founder of the militant Palestinian organization
Hamas, said Tuesday he expected the elimination of Israel and the
establishment of a Palestinian state during the first quarter of the
next
century. Addressing a news conference in Damascus, Sheikh Yassin said
Hamas
would continue its fight against Israel "until the liberation of all
Palestine." He praised President Hafez al-Assad, saying he had
"extended
all support for our struggle." Sheikh Yassin said there was cooperation
between Hamas and the pro-Iranian Lebanese Shi'ite organization
Hizbollah
which is fighting Israel's occupation of territory across south
Lebanon.
27.05.98 , Ehud
Olmert, the mayor of Jerusalem, has reportedly ordered the
demolition of shacks set up recently in a Muslim quarter the city by
the
jewish Ateret Cohanim nationalist group.
29.05.98 , The
88-member Palestinian legislature has reportedly scheduled a
no-confidence vote for Saturday concerning Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat. recent polls among Palestinians are reported to have shown less
than 40% confidence in Arafat's leadership.
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was quoted Friday as saying
the
United States would continue to press for its own Middle East peace
initiative, but did not reject a Franco-Egyptian proposal for an
international summit. Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jacques Poos said
Albright had made the comment to him in a private meeting at which they
discussed U.S.-led efforts to break a 14-month stalemate in
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. Poos said they had discussed
the
idea of a European-Arab or a European-American initiative to try to
resurrect peace talks if the faltering U.S. push for an Israeli
withdrawal
from a further 13% of the West Bank failed
June 1998
01.06.98 ,
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat says his proposal to hold an
Arab summit to address the Mid-East peace process has been accepted by
most
Arab states. A data for the summit has not been announced.
02.06.98 ,
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Israeli Defense Minister
Yitzhak Mordechai discussed ways to revive deadlocked Middle East peace
efforts Tuesday.
08.06.98 ,
Israeli ministers debated Monday whether to allow the founder of
the Muslim militant Hamas movement, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, to return to
the
Gaza Strip. Yassin, who is touring Arab capitals, is reported to have
raised tens of millions of dollars for Hamas .
10.06.98 , An
aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
yesterday that a public vote on a U.S. proposal for expanded troop
withdrawals from the West Bank is being seriously considered
11.06.98 , The
Palestine Liberation Organization has protested to the
United Nations over Israeli archaeological and settlement activities in
East Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war. In
one
of two letters to Secretary-General Kofi Annan circulated Thursday, the
PLO's U.N. observer, Nasser Al-Kidwa, said Israel had begun
archaeological
excavations in the area of Burj alLaqlaq in the Old City of Jerusalem
"as
part of preliminary activities to build an illegal new Jewish
settlement in
the heart of occupied Arab East Jerusalem." He said the work was being
done
"following a failed attempt by the extremist Jewish settler group
Ateret
Cohanim on May 25, 1998 to establish the nucleus of a new settlement"
in
that area.
15.06.98 ,
Israeli authorities demolished three Palestinian homes Monday
which they said were built without permits in Arab East Jerusalem.
While
Palestinian families stood quietly next to salvaged electrical
appliances
and furniture, an Israeli bulldozer razed the stone dwellings in
accordance
with court orders issued between 1994 and 1996. Rights groups have
accused
Israel of using bureaucratic and legal pretexts for decades to deny
Arabs
building permits and demolish their houses while encouraging Jewish
settlement expansion in occupied areas to advance a political policy.
17.06.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday that
Israelis and Palestinians may never reach a final peace agreement if
the
Palestinian claim to Jerusalem is not dropped.
18.06.98 , Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Thursday a
program to strengthen Israel's hold on Jerusalem, including plans to
tighten ties between the city and nearby West Bank Jewish settlements.
The
draft plan envisages widening Jerusalem's boundaries to include land
west
of the city, in Israel proper, and creating an "umbrella municipality"
with
administrative powers over nearby towns in Israel and some West Bank
settlements. It also calls for accelerated construction of roads
linking
West Bank Jewish settlements with the city.
24.06.98 ,
Reports say Palestinian President Yasser Arafat has accepted the
resignation of his cabinet and plans to name new ministers within two
weeks.
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the founder of the Palestinian Hamas movement,
left a
military hospital in Cairo on Wednesday for Gaza, security sources
said.
"He left this afternoon by land," one source said. Israel has not
announced
whether it will allow Yassin back home. Israel radio quoted Defense
Minister Yitzhak Mordechai as saying Wednesday he and Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu had made no final decision whether to allow Yassin
back
to Gaza. "The defense minister said the decision would be made at the
appropriate time, though he said that the (defense ministry) is ready
for
the possibility of Yassin's return," said the radio, monitored by the
BBC.
July 1998
02.07.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said yesterday that
Palestinians would defend Jerusalem against Israeli plans to expand
Jerusalem's municipal boundaries. Arafat was addressing a special
session
of the Palestinian Legislative Council.
03.07.98 ,
Israeli soldiers and Palestinians were locked in a tense
standoff along a main road in the Gaza Strip Thursday over rights of
passage for Palestinian vehicles, witnesses said. Palestinian officials
said Israeli forces early in the day had closed the coastal road
between
the southern town of Rafah and Gaza City to the north in violation of
interim peace deals, and Palestinians then blocked several
intersections in
protest. The Israeli army said Palestinian police were "deliberating
causing disturbances at various intersections" in the Gaza Strip.
06.07.98 ,
Branding Benjamin Netanyahu a liar, the head of Israel's main
opposition party told parliament on Monday the prime minister was
leading
the country towards war with the Palestinians. The fiery attack by
Labor
party leader Ehud Barak blazed a new path in the opposition's campaign
to
nudge Netanyahu towards a deal with the Palestinians or push him out of
office should he fail to fulfil promises to achieve "peace with
security."
In response, Netanyahu said gaps over the further handover of West Bank
land to self-rule "had been greatly narrowed" in U.S.-brokered
negotiations
but a deal would be sealed only when Palestinians fulfilled their
security
commitments.
08.07.98 , The
U.N. General Assembly voted yesterday to pass a resolution
upgrading the status of Palestinians in the international body. changes
the
status of the Palestinian observer mission to that of "non-voting
member."
the U.S., Israel, Micronesia, and the Marshall Islands all voted
against
the measure.
10.07.98 ,
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright pressed Israelis and
Palestinians Friday to negotiate directly on Middle East peace issues
and
renewed her warning that the current impasse cannot continue
indefinitely.
"What has happened here as a result of this long stalemate, it is
increasingly difficult...for the Israelis and the Palestinians to talk
with
each other," she said. "We don't think that this impasse can be
resolved...if they do not talk with each other.... It is essential that
the
parties talk with each other," she stressed.
13.07.98 ,
Reports say a bomb exploded this morning outside the Palestinian
Liberation Organization's (PLO) headquarters in mostly-Arab East
Jerusalem.
14.07.98 ,
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have reportedly agreed to
resume direct peace talks after Palestinian President Yasser Arafat
returns
from China tomorrow, according to the U.S. State Department. Arafat and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are not expected to take part
in
the talks directly.
An Arab-sponsored United Nations resolution that would have condemned
Israel's recently announced plans to expand the borders of Jerusalem
was
downgraded to a warning yesterday after repeated objections to the
original
resolution by the U.S.
15.07.98 ,
Israeli leaders have denied that the U.N. has any jurisdiction
concerning the decision to expand the boundaries of Jerusalem. the U.N.
Security Council has called has called for Israel to cancel the
expansion
plans and to not take any other steps that could affect the outcome of
permanent U.N. membership negotiations with Palestinians.
16.07.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat says China's support for the
establishment of a Palestinian state was secured during his recent
three-day trip to China.
17.07.98 , Israel
said Friday it would hold its first high level meeting
with the Palestinians in months in the hope of breaking a 16-month-long
deadlock in Middle East peacemaking. Israel's Defense Minister Yitzhak
Mordechai will meet senior Palestinian negotiator Mahmoud Abbas in Tel
Aviv
Sunday after the United States said last week the two could only
resolve
their differences in face-to-face talks. "In the wake of contacts
between
Israel, the Palestinians and the United States it was agreed that there
will be a meeting on Sunday between Defense Minister Mordechai and
Mahmoud
Abbas," said a Defense Ministry spokesman.
20.07.98 , Israel
and the Palestinians lowered expectations Monday of any
immediate breakthrough after their first peace talks in months elicited
agreement only to go on negotiating. "There is still a lot of work. I
don't
want to create illusions," Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai said.
Palestinians, coaxed by Washington into the three hours of talks with
Mordechai at a Tel Aviv hotel late Sunday, said they were still waiting
for
Israel to agree to a U.S. land-for-security plan to break a
16-month-old
deadlock.
22.07.98 ,
Israeli officials are reportedly seeking to expand the scope of
the current round of peace talks with Palestinians to include issues
other
than Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank. Palestinian officials say
the
agreement to hold the talks was contingent upon only the troop
withdrawal
and the PLO charter being on the agenda for discussion.
23.07.98 , Israel
is trying to arrange a summit between Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, officials
from
both sides said on Thursday. They said the head of Netanyahu's
parliamentary coalition, Meir Sheetrit, raised the idea in talks with
Arafat in Gaza on Thursday. The Palestinian official, who asked not to
be
identified, said the United States had told the Palestinians to enter
direct negotiations with Israel because it could not obtain Netanyahu's
acceptance of U.S. ideas to break the peace deadlock.
27.07.98 ,
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat says talks with Israeli
officials this week will not constitute negotiations on the handing
over of
West Bank land to the Palestinians. . Erekat says the talks will center
on
ways to revive stalled Middle East peace negotiations.
30.07.98 , The
Israeli parliament voted 60-6 yesterday to support a
preliminary measure aimed at forcing early elections in the Mid-East
nation. analysts say the vote was, in part, a protest over Prime
Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's handling of the Mid-East peace process.
August 1998
03.08.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on Palestinians
Monday to stop threatening to cut off peace talks and to keep
negotiating
over U.S. proposals to salvage Middle East peacemaking. "I would
propose to
stop using the language of ultimatums. The negotiations are progressing
with the good will of Israel, and, I want to believe, also of the
Palestinians," Netanyahu said. The Palestinian Authority has called
present
talks a "waste of time" and warned Sunday it would sever contacts if
Israeli negotiators failed to bring new ideas to the latest round of
talks
on Monday evening.
04.08.98 ,
Palestinian official Hassan Asfour said yesterday that peace
talks with Israel could be halted due to what he characterized as
Israel's
refusal to present acceptable proposals for ending a 16-month deadlock
in
the peace process.
05.08.98 , Gunmen
shot dead two Jewish settlers in the West Bank overnight
and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded Wednesday with
defiant backing for more construction on occupied land. Tuesday night's
ambush at Yitzhar settlement near Nablus put fresh strain on faltering
peace moves between Israel and the Palestinians, with hardline Israeli
politicians calling for a halt to the negotiations. The two men, aged
18
and 24, were on a security patrol at the settlement when the gunmen
opened
fire on their car.
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat announced a long-awaited cabinet
reshuffle on Wednesday but stunned legislators by keeping ministers
they
had wanted sacked for alleged corruption and mismanagement. "The old
ministries will remain the same," Arafat said before naming 10
additional
ministers to an expanded cabinet amid catcalls from members of the
88-seat
Legislative Council. Arafat accepted the resignation of his 18-seat
cabinet
in June, when lawmakers agreed to hold off a no-confidence vote to give
him
more time to appoint a new team.
12.08.98 ,
Instability has returned to the Middle East because of Israel's
refusal to implement peace accords and this has opened the way for the
return of war there, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat said Wednesday.
"It
(Israel) has challenged international legitimacy and its resolutions
and
opened the door wide for the return of violence, anarchy, war and
destruction," Arafat told a joint sitting of South Africa's two houses
of
parliament. Arafat said Palestinians had fulfilled their obligations,
but
that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government had turned its back
on
peace deals struck in Oslo and Madrid.
17.08.98 ,
Authorities in the Palestinian-controlled West Bank town of
Jericho are reported to be conducting a house-to-house search for Imad
Awadallah, a former leader of the Islamic group Hamas, who escaped from
prison on Saturday. Awadallah was arrested in April by Palestinian
police .
21.08.98 ,
Israeli troops sealed off the West Bank city of Hebron Friday
while searching for a suspected Palestinian assailant who stabbed a
Jewish
settler to death and torched his home. The army said it was barring
Palestinians from entering and leaving the volatile city following the
late-night killing of Rabbi Shlomo Raanan, 63-year-old grandson of a
spiritual leader of Israel's settler movement. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu cut short a holiday in northern Israel, announcing he would
return to Jerusalem in the afternoon for consultations in the face of
tensions in Hebron and in Lebanon where Hizbollah guerrillas killed two
Israelis.
24.08.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said Monday that Israeli
troop withdrawal proposals could be "a beginning" towards resuscitating
the
deadlocked 5-year-old peace process. But Arafat, attending a
commemoration
of the fifth anniversary of the Oslo peace accords, also accused
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of policies in the past two years
that
had fostered "despair, hate and violence." Arafat said Israeli
proposals on
troop withdrawals from the West Bank in return for Palestinian moves
against anti-Israel guerrillas would be acceptable if they had full
access
to all designated area, something Israel opposes.
25.08.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that a
deal on a long-elusive Israeli troop redeployment in the West Bank
depended
on Palestinian action against "murderers" of Jews. He spoke as one of
his
aides said Israel sensed that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat was
sounding a "new tone" on peacemaking, but that it remained to be seen
if
Arafat would meet key Israeli demands to seal a U.S.-brokered
withdrawal
deal. "Progress is linked to the Palestinian fight and actions against
the
kind of murderers who acted here," Netanyahu said.
27.08.98 , A bomb
exploded in the heart of Tel Aviv Thursday, injuring 21
people on a busy street near the city's main synagogue in an attack
police
said was the work of suspected Palestinian militants. There was no
immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, the first in Tel Aviv
since a martyr bomber killed three Israeli women in a cafe in March
1997.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, citing the blast and the recent
killings
of three Jewish settlers in the West Bank, said he would not sign any
deal
to cede more West Bank land to the Palestinian Authority unless it
fought
"murderers and terror."
September 1998
08.09.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed hope
yesterday that a visit to the Middle East by U.S. envoy Dennis Ross
would
help achieve an agreement between Israel and Palestinians on the
partial
withdrawal of Israeli troops from the West Bank.
10.09.98 ,
Reports from Israel say U.S. envoy Dennis Ross is expected to
stay in Israel this weekend in an attempt to broker a deal for handing
over
more of the West Bank to Palestinians. Ross met with Palestinian
leaders
yesterday and with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today.
11.09.98 , The
Islamic movement Hamas vowed Friday to send martyr bombers
into Israel to avenge the killing of two leading Hamas militants.
Israel
sealed its borders with the West Bank and Gaza Strip and put its troops
on
alert to guard against attacks by the group whose bombers have killed
scores of Israelis. Israeli troops killed the two Palestinian brothers
Imad
and Adel Awadallah during a West Bank clash Thursday. Israel long had
sought both of them as leaders of the Hamas military wing.
18.09.98 , U.S.
President Bill Clinton's special envoy extended his Middle
East peace mission Friday, saying he was making headway towards ending
a
19-month-old deadlock between Israel and the Palestinians. While envoy
Dennis Ross pursued a land-and-security deal, Israeli soldiers firing
rubber-coated metal bullets wounded 10 Palestinians during unrest in
the
West Bank, witnesses said. "We had a very good discussion and I think
we
are making headway," Ross said after meeting Palestinian President
Yasser
Arafat in Gaza. It was Ross's most optimistic assessment since he
arrived
in the region.
19.09.98 ,
Reports say a Palestinian teenager was killed yesterday in a
shooting incident involving Jewish settlers in the West Bank.
23.09.98 ,
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright planned to meet Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday in a fresh attempt to bring
peace negotiations with the Palestinians to closure. Officials said
U.S.
mediator Dennis Ross had made "modest" progress on a mission to the
Middle
East last week. This has raised hopes that protracted negotiations on a
deal giving Palestinians control over 13% more West Bank land could be
wrapped up in the next five or six days when Netanyahu and Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat are in New York for the opening of the U.N.
General
Assembly.
President Yasser Arafat has rejected the resignation of top Palestinian
peace negotiator Saeb Erekat, a senior Palestinian official said
Wednesday.
Erekat, who has steered Palestinian negotiations on a further Israeli
withdrawal from the West Bank, asked to be relieved of his post as
chief
negotiator over differences with other officials on the handling of
talks.
Hassan Asfour, another negotiator and a minister of state in Arafat's
cabinet, said he had attended a meeting between Arafat and Erekat in
Gaza
Tuesday at which the Palestinian leader turned down Erekat's
resignation.
25.09.98 ,
Reports say both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat will travel to Washington next week
for
Mid-East peace-related talks with President Clinton.
28.09.98 ,
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat addresses the U.N. General
Assembly Monday as he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
appear
close to agreement on key points in the long-stalled Middle East peace
process. His speech is considered crucial following requests from U.S.
officials that he not repeat his pledge to declare unilaterally a
Palestinian state on May 4. That is the date when the 1993 Oslo peace
accords that provide the framework for a Middle East agreement expire.
Such
a declaration in the United Nations, which would make it official,
would
enrage Israel and Netanyahu has warned it could scuttle the peace
talks.
29.09.98 ,
President Clinton met with Palestinian President Yasser Arafat
Tuesday in a bid to narrow differences to reach accord on a
controversial
new round of Israeli troop withdrawals from the West Bank. Clinton met
jointly with Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on
Monday
and invited them to return in about two weeks for a summit designed to
nail
down the timetable for the troop pullout. White House Press Secretary
Mike
McCurry said Clinton was prepared to become directly involved in the
mid-October summit with Arafat and Netanyahu.
Security forces clashed with Arab protesters in northern Israel Tuesday
during a general strike against land confiscation and alleged police
brutality. Witnesses said paramilitary police fired rubber-coated
bullets
and tear gas at hundreds of stone-throwers in Umm al-Fahm and Nazareth,
the
two biggest Arab towns in Israel. In Umm al-Fahm, the scene of unrest
since
Sunday, President Ezer Weizman met local officials to try to calm
tension
before the start on Tuesday evening of Yom Kippur, the holiest day in
the
Jewish calendar.
30.09.98 , Eleven
Palestinians and nine Israeli soldiers were wounded
Wednesday in explosions and shooting in the divided West Bank city of
Hebron, witnesses and security officials said. The Israeli army
announced
it had imposed a curfew on the center of the city and said the incident
began with a grenade attack on one of its patrols by a Palestinian
assailant. Palestinian residents of Hebron, a frequent flash point
blamed
Jewish settlers for the violence, which flared in the heart of the city
close to one of their enclaves. Details were unclear.
October 1998
01.10.98 ,
Israeli soldiers fired rubber-coated bullets to disperse around
200 Palestinian demonstrators who lobbed rocks and petrel bombs in the
volatile West Bank town of Hebron Thursday, witnesses said. They said
at
least six protesters were wounded before the troops and Palestinian
police
pushed demonstrators back into Palestinian-controlled areas of the
city. It
was the second day of violence in Hebron since a Palestinian threw two
hand
grenades at a patrol in the Israeli-controlled part of the city close
to a
Jewish settler enclave on Wednesday. At least 11 Palestinians and 13
Israeli soldiers and border police were wounded in the grenade attack
and
subsequent shooting.
02.10.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said Friday no "substantive"
progress had been made in his talks with U.S. President Bill Clinton in
Washington this week on breaking the impasse in Middle East
peacemaking.
"No substantive progress can really be cited, no substantive steps or
even
changes in the behavior on the ground can be cited," Arafat said in a
speech delivered in English by a top Palestinian negotiator.
05.10.98 , U.S.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright left Washington for
the Middle East Monday in the hope of breaking 19 months of deadlock in
talks between Israel and the Palestinians. The trip, her first to the
region in more than a year, should pave the way for a summit between
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian President Yasser
Arafat and President Bill Clinton in the United States on Oct. 15. She
plans to spend about two days in the region but two aides, Assistant
Secretary of State Martin Indyk and special Middle East envoy Dennis
Ross,
are traveling with her and could stay on to tie up any loose ends.
07.10.98 ,
Israeli and Palestinian leaders met with U.S. Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright yesterday in Gaza to discuss the upcoming Mid-East
summit in Washington. the summit is scheduled for later this month.
09.10.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has named Ariel Sharon
as the nation's new foreign minister.
14.10.98 , Israel
put a positive gloss on prospects for a U.S. Middle East
peace summit Wednesday, predicting success if Palestinian President
Yasser
Arafat meets Israeli demands to crack down on militants. U.S. President
Bill Clinton hosts the summit, which begins Thursday at the Wye
Plantation
outside Washington.
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said Wednesday he was optimistic
about
the prospects for a U.S.-brokered summit with Israel designed to
unblock
the stalled Middle East peace process. "Personally I believe this is a
window of opportunity, not only for us Palestinians, not only for the
Israelis, but for the entire Middle East," he said after meeting with
British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
15.10.98 , A
four-day summit begins today in the U.S. at which Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat said he was optimistic and Israeli Prime
Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will work with U.S. President Bill Clinton toward
reaching a Mid-East peace deal.
19.10.98 , At
least 59 civilians and soldiers were wounded this morning in
a bus station in southern Israel when two grenades exploded at the
location. reports say the attack was made by a Palestinian man.
Palestinian
authorities engaged in peace talks in the U.S. have condemned the
attack as
an attempt to undermine the peace process.
20.10.98 , The
Mid-East peace summit being held in the U.S. has been
extended for another day as negotiations continue between Israeli and
Palestinian authorities over a land-and-security agreement. the summit
was
scheduled to have ended Sunday.
21.10.98 ,
Jordan's King Hussein joined U.S. President Bill Clinton,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Palestinian leader
Yasser
Arafat in ongoing Mid-East peace talks in the U.S. yesterday. the
summit
will continue for its seventh day today.
Reports say about 50 Jewish settlers took part in protests yesterday on
the
West Bank against the Israeli pursuit of a peace deal with Palestinians.
Crisis struck the Middle East peace summit in Maryland Wednesday when
the
Israelis threatened to walk out, accusing the United States of going
back
on its word and the Palestinians of evasion. The U.S., which has
already
nursed the talks through six days of roller-coaster negotiations on
land
and security, said it would pursue its efforts and submit a new draft
agreement to the Israelis and Palestinians. "We are at a critical
moment.... We can't answer the question of which way this will go. The
United States can only do so much," said State Department spokesman
James
Rubin.
22.10.98 ,
Reports say a final draft of an interim peace agreement is
expected to be presented this morning to Israeli and Palestinian
negotiators taking part is talks in the U.S. today marks the seventh
day of
the peace summit.
23.10.98 ,
Reports say Palestinian and Israeli negotiators are close to
reaching a peace-for-land deal and that such a deal is likely to be
finalized and signed later today. some reports, notably one from
Reuters,
cites Palestinian sources as saying that a deal had already been
reached
and that a final draft of the agreement was being completed.
26.10.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat signed at peace-for-land agreement Friday at the
conclusion
of negotiations in the U.S. the agreement calls for Israel to
relinquish
control of portions of the West Bank in return for active measures to
be
taken by Palestinians against terrorism.
27.10.98 , A
no-confidence vote against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
was defeated yesterday in Israeli parliament. the legislative body
voted
21-8 against the motion, with 15 members abstaining. the vote came in
response to opposition to the recent peace-for-land agreement between
Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
30.10.98 ,
Israeli forces have barred Palestinians from leaving or entering
the Gaza Strip following a car bomb attack yesterday that killed one
Israeli man.
Israel's Foreign Minister Ariel Sharon said Friday that real peace with
the
Palestinians would "take years" to achieve, and called violence by
Islamic
militants a strategic threat to the Middle East. "Speaking about peace
is
not only a matter of signing a document," he said. Sharon, speaking to
reporters at his farm in southern Israel, condemned an attempted martyr
bomb attack on a bus carrying Jewish settler children in the Gaza Strip
on
Thursday. He cautiously welcomed a crackdown by the Palestinian
Authority
on the militant group Hamas following the attack but said tougher
security
steps were needed if Israel was to honor a land-for-security deal
signed
last week at the White House.
November 1998
02.11.98 ,
Israeli spokesman Aviv Bushinsky says work will begin today to
expand the Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba in the West Bank. the
settlement is adjacent to the town of Hebron.
03.11.98 , The
Israeli cabinet has postponed its ratification of the recent
Mid-East peace deal pending assurances that 30 suspected Palestinian
are
jailed for allegedly killing Israeli citizens.
04.11.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has delayed
consideration of the recent Mid-East peace deal by his cabinet, saying
he
has not received sufficient assurance from Palestinians on security
issues.
Yasser Arafat said Wednesday the Palestinian Authority had already
arrested
12 of the 30 Palestinians that Israel has named as being responsible
for
the deaths of nearly 100 Israelis. Palestinian leader Arafat told
reporters
during a visit to Spain to explain the Middle East peace agreement that
the
Palestinians would continue to work "100%" towards detaining the
remaining
people. Israel named 30 Palestinians Wednesday, including 12 it said
were
members of the security forces, whom it insisted the Palestinian
Authority
had to arrest on suspicion of killing or trying to kill Israelis.
05.11.98 ,
Israel's cabinet is scheduled to begin consideration of the
recent Mid-East peace agreement with Palestinians today. Israeli
officials
say the consideration could last for two days, but that it is expected
that
the agreement will be ratified.
06.11.98 , Two
men were killed and 21 others injured in an apparent car
bombing near a Jerusalem street market this morning. the two men killed
were the bombers themselves, according to reports. Israeli authorities
say
they are attempting to confirm an anonymous claim of responsibility for
the
attack in the name of the Islamic group Hamas. the Israeli cabinet has
suspended consideration of the recent Mid-East peace agreement pending
investigations into the bombing, which has been condemned by
Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat.
10.11.98 ,
Reports say Israel's cabinet will resume consideration of the
recent Mid-East peace deal tomorrow. discussion of the agreement was
halted
last week due to a bombing attack in Jerusalem.
12.11.98 ,
Israel's cabinet yesterday approved the recently-reached Mid-
East peace agreement with Palestinians. the approval included
provisions
against implementation in the event of a declaration of an independent
Palestinian state and the requirement that a clause in the Palestinian
charter advocating the destruction of Israel be removed.
16.11.98 ,
Reuters cites Israeli Foreign Minister Ariel Sharon as saying
that Jewish settlers should grab land in the West Bank. the Israeli
government has reportedly indicated that Sharon's remark reflects
official
policy.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday Israel's handover of West
Bank land was on hold until Yasser Arafat publicly retracted his
warning
that a Palestinian armed uprising could flare up again. "I don't intend
to
carry out any redeployment under these conditions, not even the first,
until this is rectified publicly and unequivocally," Netanyahu told
parliament in a speech opening a debate on his peace deal with the
Palestinians. Israel was to begin the first phase of a three-stage
pullback
in the West Bank later this week under the U.S.-brokered interim .
17.11.98 ,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat yesterday retracted
statements alluding to possible armed action against Israel as a means
of
resolving problems with the recent Israeli-Palestinian peace deal.
The U.S.-brokered Israeli-Palestinian peace deal appeared to be back on
track Tuesday after Palestinian President Yasser Arafat met Israel's
demand
to retract warnings over possible renewed armed struggle.
"I...reiterate
that any problems concerning final-status negotiations will be resolved
through amicable and peaceful ways and through negotiations, but not
through any other means," Arafat told a news conference. Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who had put a West Bank land handover due
later this week on hold in the war of words, called the statement a
positive step.
18.11.98 , The
Israeli Parliament voted 75-19, with nine abstentions,
yesterday to ratify the recently-reached Mid-East peace deal with
Palestinians.
Palestinian police said Wednesday they would start confiscating illegal
weapons next week in compliance with a new peace deal with Israel. The
action, required under the land-for-security accord, will be among
issues
examined by Israel's cabinet on Thursday when it meets to decide
whether to
carry out a first withdrawal of troops from part of the West Bank. "We
will
start next week collecting all illegal weapons in all Palestinian
governorates. We will be implementing the Palestinian law," said Ghazi
al-Jabali, Palestinian police chief.
19.11.98 ,
Israel's cabinet has voted to approve a first round of troop
withdrawals from the West Bank, as called for in the recently- reached
Mid-East peace agreement. the U.S. will reportedly pay Israel $1.2
billion
to cover the costs of the withdrawal.
Israel ordered the first withdrawal of troops from the occupied West
Bank
in nearly two years Thursday, honoring its new peace deal with the
Palestinians. The cabinet gave its go-ahead after ministers agreed that
the
Palestinians had met their initial security obligations under the
three-stage accord signed at the White House on Oct. 23. "The
government
today decided to approve the first stage of the further redeployment in
the
West Bank," a Cabinet Secretary said after the meeting. An official
said
the pullback was expected to take place Friday in the northern West
Bank,
along with the long-delayed opening of a Palestinian airport in Gaza.
20.11.98 , Israel
this morning handed over control of 195 square miles of
land in the West Bank to Palestinian control and released 250
Palestinian
prisoners. the moves were called for in the recently-reached Mid-East
peace
agreement.
24.11.98 , With a
broad grin, Palestinian President Yasser Arafat
inaugurated Gaza International Airport Tuesday, hailed by Palestinians
as a
commercial lifeline and a symbol of the sovereignty they seek.
Egyptian,
Moroccan, Jordanian and Spanish airliners landed at the $250 million
airport, the first on Palestinian-ruled soil. "God willing, airplanes
will
fly from this airport carrying pilgrims to Jerusalem," Arafat said at
the
airport near Rafah, on the Egyptian border. Palestinian police and
civilians danced reels of joy to the music of a brass band as the
planes
landed on the 3,380-yard runway, long enough to land a jumbo jet.
30.11.98 ,
Reports say President Clinton is scheduled to visit Israel, the
Gaza Strip, and the West Bank during a Mid-East trip December 12-15.
December 1998
02.12.98 ,
Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat said yesterday
that he reserves the right to declare an independent Palestinian state
next
year, even if no final peace agreement is reached between Israelis and
Palestinians.
Two dozen Palestinians ambushed an Israeli soldier in a car Wednesday,
smashing its windshield then dragging him out and beating him with
stones
in a brutal assault that was captured by news cameras. The soldier
cowered
by the car door, holding his hands up to fend off blows as several
Palestinians struck his head with rocks. After a minute of relentless
attack, the soldier ran away, bleeding from the head. His assailants
stole
his rifle, threw more stones at him, then set his car on fire. In
Jerusalem, a 41-year-old Palestinian street cleaner, Osama Musa Natche,
was
stabbed to death Wednesday in what police believe was an attack by an
Israeli extremist blamed for six other stabbings.
03.12.98 , Israel
has asked that President Clinton not land at the newly
opened Palestinian airport, saying this would boost Palestinian claims
to
independence, a senior Israeli official said Thursday. The Clinton
administration is considering the request, said a U.S. official who
spoke
on condition of anonymity. Clinton is to arrive in Israel on Dec. 12
and is
to fly to the Gaza Strip on Dec. 14 to usher in the second stage of the
Wye
River land-for-peace agreement he helped negotiate. A possible Clinton
landing at Gaza International, which opened last week as part of the
agreement, had been considered by the White House.
04.12.98 , Israel
has suspended its troop withdrawal from the West Bank
following an attack by Palestinians on two Israelis
08.12.98 , New
clashes erupted Tuesday in the West Bank as domestic
pressure mounted on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to abandon the
Wye
River land-for-security agreement with the Palestinians. The renewed
violence and Israel's political turmoil came just a days before
President
Clinton's visit to Israel and the Palestinian areas next week. The trip
was
intended to shore up the Wye agreement and restore calm to the region,
but
appeared to be having the opposite effect. In the West Bank town of Ram
just north of Jerusalem, several dozen Palestinian high school students
overturned garbage dumpsters Tuesday and hurled stones at Israeli
soldiers,
who responded with rubber bullets. Four students were injured
09.12.98 ,
Palestinians held a general stroke yesterday throughout the West
Bank to mark the 11th anniversary of the Palestinian uprising against
Israeli occupation.
Despite U.S. appeals to stop violence, Palestinians stoned Wednesday
Israeli troops and motorists in the most widespread West Bank clashes
in
months. Israeli army gunfire killed one Palestinian. Troops also fired
rubber-coated steel pellets and tear gas to contain the violent
protests on
the 11th anniversary of the start of the Palestinians six-year uprising
against Israel. In all, at least 67 Palestinians were injured by rubber
bullets and three by live rounds. The death came just four days before
the
start of President Clinton's visit to Israel and the Palestinian areas,
and
was likely to trigger new violence
10.12.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday announced an
Israeli crackdown on Palestinian unrest in preparation for U.S.
President
Bill Clinton's upcoming trip to the Mid-East.
11.12.98 , On the
eve of President Clinton's arrival, Israeli troops opened
fire Friday on hundreds of Palestinian stone throwers, killing two and
injuring 27 during a protest against Israel's refusal to release
prisoners.
The violence and Israel's positions concerning the peace agreement
Clinton
is coming to promote raised new concerns that the presidential visit
will
be plagued by problems. Earlier today, Israel rejected a U.S.
compromise on
the release of Palestinian prisoners and also affirmed it will not
withdraw
troops in the West Bank unless the top Palestinian decision-making body
holds a vote to annul clauses of the PLO charter calling for Israel's
destruction.
14.12.98 , In a
historic day stirring Palestinian passions for statehood,
President Clinton stood witness Monday as hundreds of Palestinian
leaders
renounced a call for the destruction of Israel. Clinton urged
"legitimate
rights for Palestinians, real security for Israel." The Palestinian
vote -
registered with a show of hands and applause - removed a contentious
issue
dating back to 1964 from the crisis-shrouded Mideast peace process. The
action appeared to have cleared the way for a three-way meeting among
Clinton, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu. At stake was the revival of the Wye River
land-for-security accord, nearing collapse with Israelis and the
Palestinians accusing each other of violating the deal .
15.12.98 ,
President Clinton failed Tuesday to persuade Israel to resume
the West Bank troop withdrawals called for under the Wye River peace
accord, but he held out hope the pullback would take place soon. "We
will
have fits and starts but we will get through this just fine," he said.
Speaking to American reporters after a 90-minute meeting with Israeli
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at
this
border outpost, Clinton called his three-day Mideast trip a success. In
remarks to reporters later, Sandy Berger, the president's national
security
adviser, qualified Clinton's remark about the peace process being back
on
track. "It's a bumpy track," he said with a smile .
16.12.98 ,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his cabinet
yesterday that Israel would not proceed with a scheduled handover of
more
of the West Bank to Palestinians on Friday. Netanyahu said that
Palestinians have not satisfied the requirements for such a handover to
take place.
21.12.98 , The
Israeli cabinet voted yesterday to suspend implementation of
Israeli troop withdrawals from the West Bank as called for in the Wye
River
land-for-security deal. Palestinian non-compliance with provisions of
the
accord was cited as the reason for the suspension. the Israeli
parliament
is scheduled to vote today on the suspension.
22.12.98 , The
Israeli parliament yesterday approved the first reading of a
bill calling for early general elections. the vote followed the passing
of
a resolution of non-support for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's
peace
policies.
23.12.98 , The
Palestinian Authority freed the spiritual leader of the
Islamic militant group Hamas Wednesday from nearly two months of house
arrest. The release of Sheik Ahmed Yassin is likely to heighten
tensions
between the Palestinians and Israel, coming as the two sides accuse
each
other of stalling the Wye River land-for-security accord. Outside
Yassin's
house in a slum neighborhood of Gaza City, a crowd of rejoicing
followers
surrounded the frail, ailing sheik in his wheelchair, kissing and
greeting
him. Word of Yassin's release drew new criticism from the Israel.
29.12.98 ,
The Israeli parliament's Constitution and Law Committee today
passed a resolution calling for national elections to be held May 17,
1999.
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