May 19, 2001 at 11:30 pm
Courtesy of the BBC:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1335000/images/_1338705_f_16_150ap.jpg
Arab League countries are breaking off political contacts with Israel because of the way it retaliated against a Palestinian suicide bombing within Israel on Friday
The decision was taken at a meeting of Arab foreign ministers in Cairo.
Secretary-General of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, said peace proposals put forward by Egypt and Jordan could not be discussed while Israel continued its attacks against the Palestinians.
Israel used bomber aircraft for the first time against Palestinian towns on Friday, after the suicide attack in a crowded Israeli shopping centre.
Only the Palestinian Authority is to be exempted from the ban on contacts with Israel, but Egypt and Jordan, which have peace treaties with the Jewish state, will no longer be able to receive Israeli envoys, nor will they be sending their ambassadors back to Tel Aviv in the near future.
Former Egyptian Foreign Minister Mr Moussa, who has been active in negotiating with Israel, said: “Our intention is not to talk or fall into the trap of talking about peace proposals while we see that the Israeli Government does not really mean it.”
A spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon condemned an Arab League statement as “a nonsense,” the French news agency AFP reported.
“The Arabs claim to want peace, like ourselves, and if they cut off relations, it seems difficult to pursue that idea,” Raanan Gissin told AFP.
Resolute tone
The Arab League ministers also adopted a resolution calling for an emergency meeting at the United Nations in order to secure some form of international protection for the Palestinians.
The United States has already vetoed an earlier proposal to send an international protection force to the Palestinian territories.
The foreign ministers have also charged Mr Moussa with ensuring that their financial aid is delivered speedily to the Palestinians.
Mr Mussa had earlier said that the Arabs had agreed that they should support the Palestinian uprising whatever the cost, saying their credibility was at stake.
Our correspondent Haba Saleh says Mr Moussa appears to have brought a new resolute tone to the Arab League, but it is not yet clear if that will be matched with sustained action.
Bomber attacks
On Saturday, Israeli helicopter gunships carried out further attacks on Palestinian security offices in the West Bank, despite international calls for restraint.
Buildings were rocketed in the towns of Tulkarm and Jenin, wounding at least 30 people, and in separate incidents, three Palestinians were shot dead by Israeli troops.
Israeli bomber aircraft attacked Palestinian targets in the West Bank and Gaza on Friday, killing at least 12 people.
Six Israelis had been killed by the suicide bomber at a crowded shopping centre in the coastal Israeli town of Netanya a few hours before.
International pressure
It was one of the worst days of violence since the Palestinian uprising began eight months ago.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell urged leaders in the Middle East and elsewhere to condemn the violence and “do everything they can to control passions” in the region.
Funerals were held on Saturday for Palestinians and the seven Israelis who died in Friday’s violence.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan called Israel’s military response to Friday’s Palestinian suicide bombing “disproportionate”.
It was the first time the Israelis had used fighter bombers against Palestinian towns since 1967.
European leaders also voiced concern at the escalation in the fighting.
The Israeli prime minister’s spokesman said the use of aircraft had been justified by the “seriousness” of the suicide attack in the coastal town of Netanya.
The Palestinian Authority condemned the murder of “innocent Palestinian or Israeli civilians”.
The Palestinian militant group, Hamas, said it carried out the attack in Netanya, and has suggested that more will follow.
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So, what do you think? Is Israel in danger of being swallowed up in a conflict with almost all its neighbours?
Ivan