Carter: Hamas will accept Israel
Former US
President Jimmy Carter has said that Hamas is prepared to accept the right of
Israel to “live as a neighbour next door in peace”.
BBC News
4/21/08
After meeting
Hamas leaders last week in Syria, he said it was a problem the US and Israel
would not meet the group.
His comments
came as the Israeli army launched a formal investigation into the death of a
Reuters cameraman killed in the Gaza Strip last week.
And two
Palestinians died in Israeli air strikes in the territory.
Monday’s
strikes killed one Palestinian in the southern city of Rafah and a Hamas
militant at Beit Hanoun, a border town from where rockets are often fired at
Israel.
‘Regressed’
Mr Carter,
speaking in Jerusalem, said Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking had “regressed”
since the US hosted Middle East talks in November at Annapolis.
The former US
president was criticised by the US and Israel for visiting the Syrian capital
Damascus last week to meet exiled Hamas political leader Khaled Meshaal.
But he
defended his visit on Monday, telling Israel’s Council on Foreign Relations:
“The problem is not that I met with Hamas in Syria. The problem is that Israel
and the United States refuse to meet with someone who must be involved.” Mr
Carter said Hamas had reiterated its position that it would accept an Israeli
state within its pre-1967 borders, living in peace with Israel, if such an
agreement was approved by Palestinians.
Speaking to
the BBC’s Newsnight programme, Mr Carter said: “Hamas indicated to us at least
- I’m not guaranteeing their commitment - that if Israel is willing to have a
mutual ceasefire and a renunciation of violence in Gaza and in the West Bank,
they will accept it, and as a first step they would even accept just limiting
that to Gaza.
“So I think
that what they have said, if they were honest and we wrote it out so there
wouldn’t be a mistake, it’s a very significant development.” Israel, the US and
the European Union regard Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, as a terrorist
organisation.
Hamas is
officially dedicated to the destruction of Israel and the creation of an
Islamic state in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza.
Shalit
deadlock
Mr Carter also
said that the release of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, captured by Hamas
and other militant groups during a raid into Israel two years ago, was being
held up by the lack of direct communication between Israel and Hamas.
Mr Carter said
the difficulty was in agreeing the identity of the Palestinian prisoners to be
released in return.
He said
Egyptian officials had told him that Israel had agreed to release 1,000
prisoners, in principle.
However, it
had accepted only 71 names on a list of hundreds of prisoners submitted by
Hamas.
Mr Carter also
said Hamas had agreed to let Cpl Shalit send a letter to his parents.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/7358188.stm
Published: 2008/04/21 11:10:04 GMT
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