Daily News Issue Date:
September 30, 2008
The Independent offers continued coverage of outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert?s recent public acknowledgement that Israel will have to return to the 1967 borders in order to reach a peace deal (1). An autopsy of the Palestinian shepherd who was found dead near Nablus reveals that he was killed by shrapnel from a grenade (2). As the holy month of Ramadan draws to a close, Hamas and Fatah pledge to seek unity at upcoming meetings in Cairo (3), however Hamas has allegedly planned to name one if its own high officials as interim president when Mahmoud Abbas? term expires in January (7). Daniel Levy assesses the current state of the Oslo accords on their 15th anniversary (4).
Israel will have to reinstate pre-1967 border for peace deal, Olmert admits
Article Author(s):
Donald MacIntyre
Media Outlet:
The Independent
The outgoing Prime Minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert, has publicly acknowledged for the first time that "almost all" of the territory seized during the Six-Day War in 1967 will have to be given back in return for peace with the Palestinians.
Shepherd 'not killed by settler'
A Palestinian found dead in the West Bank was not killed by Jewish settlers, Israeli police said, contradicting earlier claims by the man's family.
Shepherd Yahya Minya died from a shrapnel wound caused by a grenade, according to a police autopsy.
A police spokesman ruled out any possibility the grenade, of a type used by the Israeli military, was fired by residents of a nearby settlement.
Local people said Mr Minya was last seen being chased by settlers in a car.
Hamas, Fatah leaders pledge Palestinian unity bid
Leaders of the rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas marked the end of the holy month of Ramadan on Tuesday with pledges to seek unity at talks in Cairo in the coming weeks.
Healing the deep rift between them is seen as a vital step towards an eventual peace deal with Israel.
But there was no evident sign of a change of position on either part signaling that their feud, which climaxed with militant Islamist Hamas fighters forcing Fatah forces out of the Gaza Strip in June 2007, would soon be resolved.
Oslo at 15 Years--A Vanishing Dream
Article Author(s):
Daniel Levy
Media Outlet:
Prospectsforpeace.com
This month marked 15 years since the signing of the Israel-PLO Declaration of Principles on the South Lawn of the White House, launching the Oslo process and a new hope for the Middle East. The anniversary was largely ignored, overshadowed by the latest rounds of political uncertainty and upheaval in both Israel (where the ruling Kadima party elected Tzipi Livni its new leader) and in the Palestinian territories. Indeed there was little cause for fanfare or celebration.
Palestinian Economy: From Bad to Wretched
Article Author(s):
Ramzy Baroud
Media Outlet:
Arabic Media Internet Network
The numbers are grim, whether in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip. The Palestinian economy is in one of its most wretched states, and the disaster is mostly, if not entirely manmade, thus reversible.
Palestinian?s Planned Cities Planner
Article Author(s):
Felice Friedson
Media Outlet:
The Media Line
Bashar Masri is chairman of the board of Massar International, a private development company with offices across the Middle East and Asia. Bashar is also the creator of the first planned Palestinian city, Rawabi. He spoke with The Media Line's Felice Friedson.
TML: When you drive through Ramallah you see lots of construction going on, and business seems to be booming. Are foreign businesses investing in Palestinian areas?
Hamas challenges Abbas term extension
Article Author(s):
Khaled Abu Toameh
Media Outlet:
The Jerusalem Post
Hamas is planning to declare one of its top officials as interim president of the Palestinian Authority after Mahmoud Abbas's term in office expires in January 2009, Hamas officials in the Gaza Strip said Sunday.
The officials told The Jerusalem Post that Hamas would not recognize Abbas as president of the PA after that date. "We will remove his pictures from all the public institutions," said one official. "Until now, our policy has been not to challenge Abbas's legitimacy as the elected leader of the Palestinian Authority."
Israeli Rights Watchdog Sets Up Shop in Washington
Article Author(s):
Nathan Guttman
Media Outlet:
The Jewish Daily Forward
A new and unusual player is joining the Israel advocacy scene in the nation?s capital.
B?Tselem, Israel?s leading human rights watchdog organization, launched its Washington operation September 24, aiming to spread information regarding Israeli human rights abuses against Palestinians to the crowd of Capitol Hill policymakers and Middle East think tanks, and to the American Jewish community.
The Etzion illusion
Article Author(s):
Gershom Gorenberg
History - the history everyone thinks they know - misleads us. Take the story of Kfar Etzion, the first Israeli settlement in the West Bank, established 41 years ago this week.
In the Israeli consciousness, Kfar Etzion has played a double role. On one hand, it has been the ultimate "consensus settlement." After all, the settlers returned to the site of a kibbutz that was overrun, along with the rest of the Etzion Bloc, on the eve of Israel's independence. Even veteran opponents of settling in occupied territory shrug, smile and say "that's different" when the Etzion Bloc is mentioned.