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Africa North
Arab League asks for no-fly zone over Libya
2011-03-13
[Arab News] The Arab League asked the UN Security Council Saturday to impose a no-fly zone over Libya to protect civilians from air attack by forces of Muammar Qadaffy's embattled government, giving crucial backing to a key demand of the rebel forces battling to oust the Libyan leader.
And how might the Arab League assist the UNSC do such a thing? Will members of the Arab League [door number 1] volunteer air bases, support personnel, fuel and money? Or [door number 2] ask for the UNSC to implement the no-fly zone knowing up-front that Russia and China will veto, thus absolving them of any responsibility for what's happening to their Arab 'brothers'?
Foreign ministers from the 22-member Arab bloc, meeting in Cairo, also left the Libyan leader of more than 40 years increasingly isolated, declaring his government had "lost its illusory sovereignty."

They also appeared to confer legitimacy on the rebel's interim government, the National Libyan Council, saying they would establish contacts with the umbrella group and calling on nations to provide it with "urgent help."

"The Arab League asks the United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society to shoulder its responsibility ... to impose a no-fly zone over the movement of Libyan military planes and to create safe zones in the places vulnerable to Arclight airstrikes," said a League statement released after the emergency session.

League Secretary-General Jerry Lewis doppelgänger Amr Moussa
... who has been head of the Arab League since about the time Jerry and Dean split up ...
stressed in remarks afterward that a no-fly zone was intended as a humanitarian measure to protect Libyan civilians and foreigners in the country and not as a military intervention.

That stance appeared meant to win over the deeply Arab nationalist government of Syria, which has smarted against foreign intervention into Arab affairs.

The Arab League cannot impose a no-fly zone itself. But the approval of the key regional Arab body gives the US and other Western powers crucial regional backing they say they need before doing so. Many were weary that Western powers would be seen as intervening in the affairs of an Arab country if they began a no-fly zone without Arab approval.

Still, the B.O. regime has said a no-fly zone may have limited impact, and the international community is divided over the issue.

Backing the rebel's politicianship, the League statement said it had faced "grievous violations and serious crimes by the Libyan authorities, which have lost their illusory sovereignty." The League's decision comes hours before the European Union's policy chief is set to arrive in Cairo to meet with the Arab bloc's leaders to discuss the situation in Libya.

Catherine Ashton said she hoped to discuss a "collaborative approach" with Arab League chief Moussa on Libya and the rest of the region. Ashton said it was necessary to evaluate how effective economic sanctions imposed on Qadaffy's regime had been so far and that she was "keeping all options moving forward" regarding any additional measures.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle welcomed the EU's "very cautious" stance on possible military intervention.

"We do not want to be drawn into a war in north Africa -- we should have learned from the events in and surrounding Iraq," Westerwelle said. "It is very important that the impression doesn't arise that this is a conflict of the West against the Arab world or a Christian crusade against people of Mohammedan faith."

"The Arab League has officially requested the UN Security Council to impose a no-fly zone against any military action against the Libyan people," Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa told a news conference after a meeting of the group.

Moussa said the League also decided to open contacts and cooperate with the Libyan rebel council based in Benghazi, which has risen up against the country's leader, Muammar Qadaffy.

Communications with the Libyan National Council would include contacts on humanitarian assistance, he said.

The League's decision follows a statement by the European Union that it would consider military action in Libya only if it were supported by the United Nations and the vaporous Arab League.

During Friday's talks in Brussels, La Belle France and Britain pushed to maintain the military option because of continued fighting in Libya and the threat of more violence by the forces of Qadaffy, who has used at least some European-made weapons to attack his own people.

To coordinate action with the regional forces, the EU will meet in a summit "soon" with the Arab League and the African Union. With their backing, and that of the UN Security Council, the EU leaders said they want to go as far as needed to remove Qadaffy from power.

"Out objective is the safety of the people, and the safety of the people has to be ensured by all necessary means," EU President Herman van Rompuy has said.

The Arab League's stand is seen to buoy morale among Libya's rebels, who have been forced into the defensive as Qadaffy's forces mounted a counterattack in several fronts in the past days.

On Friday, Qadaffy's troops forced rebels to retreat overnight from the outskirts of the oil town of Ras Lanouf, pushing the front line eastward. The front line now stands between the rebel-held town of Uqaylah and Ras Lanouf, where oil storage tanks were hit during Friday's fighting. Rebels blamed an air strike but the government denied hitting the oil plant.

Rebels, however, said there were more fighters standing by.

"The volunteers now at the front are less than 30 percent of the people who are willing to go and fight, our people are ready and determined to fight Qadaffy's forces," Libyan National Council chief Mustafa Abdel Jalil told Rooters in an interview.

It was clear the rebels had retreated from Ras Lanouf, but with a rapidly-moving battlefield, just how far was uncertain.

"We're out of Ras Lanouf. They've beaten us back with bombardment," rebel Col. Bashir Abdul Qadr told Rooters. "We've moved back 20 km (12 miles) from last night because we are also afraid the refinery will explode."

"Yesterday evening there was heavy bombing from Libyan war planes. This bombardment made us take positions back from Ras Lanouf, but not 20 km as we heard, we are 3 km (away), rebel Col. Hamed Al-Hasi told Arabiya news network, adding: "I advise journalists not to enter the field of operations because we cannot guarantee their safety."

There were three air strikes close to a checkpoint near the town of Uqaylah, 40 km (25 miles) from Ras Lanouf unsettling the rebels who moved off the road and into the desert.

The colonel told Rooters that, according to engineers, the refinery at Ras Lanouf will blow up in the next five days due to the damage sustained in the operation to retake the town with a fierce land, sea and air assault.

This could not be independently corroborated.

Rebels, armed mainly with anti-aircraft and anti-tank guns, rocket propelled grenade launchers and light weapons, fought back to hold Ras Lanouf, about 590 km (370 miles) east of Tripoli, but were overwhelmed by Qadaffy's firepower.

"The city is a ghost town. The presence of civilians there is very difficult because of the intensity of the bombardment. Qadaffy's forces are still present in Ras Lanouf ... Under the aerial cover, they seized the opportunity yesterday," said Al-Hasi, adding: "The battles are far from the oil areas, the battles are on the outskirts of Ras Lanouf."

The next big oil town of Brega was alive with rumour that Qadaffy forces would be advancing shortly, mounting another overwhelming show of military force. On the outskirts, rebels made preparations in armed vehicles to defend the town.

"This will be their next target. They will be coming here next," said Rafah Farsi, 31, an oil worker and one of the few residents to remain in Brega.

"It saddens me seeing people fleeing their own homes for safety," a tearful Farsi told Rooters. "Ras Lanouf was a residential area and now it's destroyed, why?"

There was growing support for the scenario that Qadaffy's push east could leave him fighting a prolonged guerrilla war.

"We don't care how long it takes, five years or 10 years. The gate has been opened," said Bashir Warshfani, 30, a rebel in military fatigues and wearing a keffiyeh.

"If I die, my brother takes my place, if he dies, my neighbor. Qadaffy will only get this country when he kills us all," said Warshfani, lifting his shirt to show the entry and exit wound of a bullet that was freshly bandaged.

Some 4x4 vehicles with heavy weapons moved back toward Ras Lanouf from the front line in this barren landscape dotted with oil terminals that divides the west with Tripoli as its capital from the rebel-held east and Libya's second city of Benghazi.

The colonel was keen to boost the morale of a group of about 40 troops, saying: "Anyone who is willing to fight and become a martyr, come and fight!" To which the fighters replied: "Allahu Akbar! (God is greatest!)"
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Arab League endorses direct talks
2010-07-31
Our work is done here. Waiter! More wine! And bring a menu...
Arab League foreign ministers on Thursday authorized the Palestinian Authority to enter into direct negotiations with Israel, but left it up to PA President Mahmoud Abbas to decide on the timing.

Jerusalem immediately welcomed the decision, taken at a special meeting in Cairo, with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu issuing a statement saying he was "prepared to begin direct and honest discussions with the Palestinian Authority in the coming days."

The US, which has been urging Abbas to switch from the current "proximity" talks to direct talks, also praised the move, and said it would seek to convene the direct talks "as soon as possible."

Netanyahu added that it would be possible through direct negotiations to soon reach an accord "between the two peoples."

Defense Minister Ehud Barak, currently in Washington, also praised the move, saying that only direct negotiations would lead to two states for two peoples. He added that the negotiations would require "difficult and courageous" decisions from both sides, and that he hoped the Palestinians "also realize that."

Qatari Foreign Minister Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani said the Arab foreign ministers decided to send a letter to US President Barack Obama explaining the Arab position vis-a-vis the entire peace process in the Middle East.

Abbas told the foreign ministers that Obama had been exerting heavy pressure on him to enter direct negotiations, a PA official in Ramallah said. Abbas told the ministers he saw no reason why he should succumb to the American pressure in light of the fact that no progress has been achieved during the current US-brokered proximity talks.

The US pressure, according to Israeli officials, was leveled not only at the PA, but also at the Arab League to ensure that it not "handcuff" Abbas.

One senior Israeli official said that the League's decision could have been "much worse," and that it could have piled on a number of conditions for Abbas before enabling him to enter the talks.

"Abbas now has the backing to go into the talks," the official said, adding that the Arab League gave him the ball to do with it what he wanted.

The official said Jerusalem made no commitments to ensure the Arab League green light. Israel's position is that it would not institute new confidence building measures toward the PA to get it into direct talks, but that once the talks began both sides would be expected to take steps to improve the atmosphere and ensure the talks succeed.

The official, who said he was fairly optimistic that direct talks would resume, gave no indication of where the negotiations would be held, or in what format.

In Washington, meanwhile, a State Department official said the US was "encouraged by reports that Arab states meeting in Cairo agree on the need to resume direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians to reach a final-status agreement. In the days ahead, we will continue to work with the parties, Arab countries, and our international partners to launch these negotiations as soon as possible."

The Qatari minister said that Thursday's meeting did not discuss when and how the direct talks would take place. "The Palestinians will decide when conditions are suitable for the negotiations," he said.

"We are sure that Israel is not serious about the peace process," the minister said. "Israel just wants to waste time. On the other hand, we are confident that the US is serious and we are sure of Obama's intentions to achieve peace."

He said that the Arab ministers were originally opposed to direct talks with Israel, but changed their mind due to the "situation in the Arab world."

He added: "Whether we hold indirect or direct talks with Israel, there will be no progress as long as [Prime Minister Binyamin] Netanyahu is around. But we want to prove to the world that we want peace, without giving up our principles, and that there's a price for peace."

Asked if the US administration had given the Arab League any "assurances," the Qatari minister said: "The Arabs don't have guarantees; we only have hopes and fears."

Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, however, told reporters after the meeting that Obama's message to Abbas, which included a pledge to work toward achieving a two-state solution, was tantamount to assurances.

"We don't want lengthy talks that would allow the continuation of settlement construction and Israeli practices [on the ground]," Moussa stressed. "We know that Netanyahu is not serious. But we are addressing the US because the Americans are addressing us. We won't enter negotiations without a time limit or a reference, as was the case in the past. The Israelis are playing a political game by winning time. This is what we are trying to prevent by proving that they are not serious."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
400 Egyptians turned away from Gaza border
2010-06-15
Hundreds of Egyptian activists ended a sit-in along the Rafah border crossing on Sunday, Egypt's state-run Daily News reported, after being denied entry into Gaza.

Demonstration organizer Omar Abdullah told the Daily News that some 400 opposition group and union members headed to the newly opened crossing on Friday in five buses loaded with food and aid, to protest what he said was a government ban on the group, preventing them from entering Gaza.

"We were told that the Palestinian officials were busy preparing for the visit of Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa to Gaza [on Sunday] and could not receive this number of activists," Abdullah, a Muslim Brotherhood movement member, told the newspaper, saying he believed Palestinian officials were pressured to reject the visit.

Abdullah said the aid was seized by Egyptian officers as the convoy headed north to Gaza, and was reprotedly told that the goods would be transferred into Israel via the Al-Ouja crossing, then transferred into Gaza.

"Such an act reflects bad intentions," Abdallah was quoted as saying about the move.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Arab states urged to cut ties with Israel
2010-05-16
[Iran Press TV Latest] Two committees at Arab Parliament have called on the Arab League members to sever "all direct and indirect contacts with Israel" over Tel Aviv's "ethnic cleansing" policy.

During a two-day convention in Damascus, the Foreign Affairs and Policy Committee and the National Security Committee, called on member states to sever all ties with the Israeli regime in protest at the expulsion policy it has been practicing in the West Bank.

The committees pointed to Tel Aviv's latest decision to expel tens of thousands of West Bank Palestinians, describing it as a "new chapter of ethnic cleansing."

Israel has a policy, which allows the military to deport or expel "infiltrators," who according to Tel Aviv are Palestinians without proper registration papers.

Two military orders enforced in April expanded the definition of "infiltrator," thereby rendering potentially thousands of Gaza residents in the West Bank susceptible to deportation.

"Intensified settlement activity in the occupied Arab territories reaffirms that Israel does not wish to reach a just peace in the Middle East, rejecting any mediation aimed at stopping settlement growth and withdrawing from all occupied land to the 1967 borders," the committees said on Saturday.

In March, Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa said that the body would discuss withdrawing the Arab Peace Initiative amidst ongoing settlement activity.

The initiative offers normalization of ties with Israel in exchange for the creation of a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders.

Since the indirect talks between Israel and Palestine began last week, Tel Aviv has revealed several plans for illegal settlement growth throughout East al-Quds (Jerusalem) and the West Bank.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Damascus: Mashal, Moussa talk unity
2010-04-14
[Ma'an] Head of Hamas' politburo Khalid Mash'al met with Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa in Mash'al's Damascus office Monday, where the two discussed a list of obstacles preventing Palestinian reconciliation.

Hamas officials in Gaza said Mash'al told Moussa that an American veto was the central issue in reconciliation,
It's all President Obama's fault? Interesting.
noting Palestinians - and certainly Hamas - were for Palestinian political unity in the face of continued Israeli occupation.

Moussa laid out possible mechanisms of Arab League support to foster unity, and bring acceptable conditions to all parties so a strong Palestinian agreement could be achieved, while Mash'al said solid Arab League support for the Egyptian unity initiative would help overcome division.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Ahmadinejad to Hezbollah: Finish Israel Off - If Repeats Mistakes
2010-02-21
In a telephone conversation with the Hezbollah secretary general, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, "In the event of recurrence of [the past] mistakes the Zionist regime [of Israel] must be finished off." He went on to say that "the Iranian nation will stand side by side of the nations of the region and Lebanon in this regard."
...and we will fight to the last...Lebanese.
A statement appearing on the official website of the Iranian president read that President Ahmadinejad's Thursday telephone conversation with the secretary general of Hezbollah Resistance Movement, Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah, was aimed at discussing the latest developments in Lebanon and the region.

"Stressing on the importance of maintaining readiness in the face of potential threats by the Zionist regime [of Israel], the president said: The level of readiness should be to such an extent that if they (the Israelis) ventured upon repeating their past mistakes, they will be finished off and the region will rid them for once and for all, and the Iranian nation will stand side by side of the nations of the region and Lebanon in this regard," read the statement dated Thursday, February 18, 2010.

Although one could argue that the remarks are merely a show of solidarity and moral support, the comments could be roughly taken as an indication that the Islamic Republic is wiling to offer military support to Lebanon in the event of another Israeli aggression.

During the last Israeli-waged war on Lebanon — which was the second of its kind — more than 1,200 Lebanese, mostly civilians, were killed, more than 4,000 others were injured and Israeli landmines and cluster bombs planted in southern Lebanon continues to claim innocent lives to date.

Eventually after 33 days of fire, Israel was forces to retreat without achieving any of its objectives as a result of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701.

Ever since what became to be commonly known as "Israel's humiliating defeat in Lebanon," Tel Aviv has been threatening Beirut with another military offensive, while Israeli fighter jets have been conducting regular overflights in violation of Lebanese airspace.

Recently officials in Tel Aviv have adopted a harsher and more aggressive tone, saying that another conflict with Lebanon could be imminent.

Yossi Peled, an Israeli cabinet minister and a former army general who has experienced the conflict on the northern border, said on Saturday, January 23, that another confrontation with Hezbollah was almost inevitable but he could not say when it would happen.

The minister without portfolio said that according to his "estimation, understanding and knowledge," it was "almost clear" to him that another conflict on the border with Lebanon was imminent.

"It does not necessary have to be between us and Hezbollah, other elements may be involved in this," Peled said.

The Israeli minister's use of the term "other elements" could be interpreted that Tel Aviv already knows that it has drawn the ire of the whole region and that any other act of aggression that it conducts could have a united response from the countries in the Middle East.

Iran, Lebanon and Syria, along with a number of other states in the Middle East, see Israel as the main obstacle on the region's path towards peace and stability, and the heads of these states have made no efforts hiding their views.

The most recent of such expressions came from Syrian President Bashar al Assad, who said on Wednesday, February 17, that he believed "stability will not be established [in the Middle East region] under Israel's disingenuous approaches toward peace."

The Hezbollah Resistance Movement in Lebanon, and its charismatic leader Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah, have on numerous occasions remarked that Israel is the most dangerous — if not the only — threat in the Middle East.

The movement says Tel Aviv threats are the reason behind the fact that Hezbollah is maintaining its weapons despite the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701, which calls on the group to lay down its arms.

"...Weapons are the result of the Resistance's existence and the Resistance [Movement of Hezbollah] is there because of the presence of the enemy (Israel)," Hezbollah's Deputy Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qassem said on Saturday, February 6.

Iranian President Ahmadinejad has his own fair share of opinions about Israel. Perhaps one of his most quoted comments about the Tel Aviv regime is that Israel should be "wiped off the map" — a comment which he later on explained was misunderstood and that what he actually meant was that Israel would "disappear" the same way that Apartheid and the Soviet Union disappeared.

President Ahmadinejad maintains that "The Zionist regime [of Israel] is an artificial regime — a fictitious regime. You brought people from different parts of the world and you have built this state. No, that cannot last, it is not sustainable. If they do not listen to our solution, this will happen one day."

In his recent conversation with the Hezbollah secretary general, however, President Ahmadinejad said he highly doubted that Israel would dare launch another attack on Lebanon.

"The Zionists are extremely afraid of the Resistance [Movement of Hezbollah] and the people of Lebanon and the region. But they seek to make up for their previous defeats in the Gaza [Strip] and Lebanon, because they feel that their dignity and existence is threatened. Yet they dare not do this (launching another attack on Lebanon) either, because they fear the consequences," Ahmadinejad was quoted as telling Nasrallah by the statement on the official website of the Iranian president.

The statement goes on to quote the Hezbollah secretary general as saying that "strategically speaking, the Zionist regime [of Israel] is in no position to initiate a new war; however, it seeks to spread fear and intimidation through its threats and psychological warfare — although, at any rate, it will not achieve anything [through such efforts]."

It remains to be known whether Israel will dare to launch another attack on the Lebanese territories or not. However, one thing is for sure: In the even of such an aggression the regional states will form a united front against Israel — at least that is what Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa believes.

"If a new attack or aggression is in the process of being prepared, they (Israel) will not get away with it easily," Moussa said after meeting with the Lebanese Foreign Minister Ali Shami in Beirut on Wednesday, February 17.

"We learned the lessons of 2006, and the Arab position is to stand by Lebanon," he said.
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Arabia
Yemen rebels ask AL to intervene in conflict with govt
2009-11-17
I looked at the headline and thought, what is the Awami League doing in that part of the world?
Yemeni armed forces and Huthi rebels fought a fierce battle on Monday near the border with Saudi Arabia, as the rebels appealed to the Arab League to intervene on their behalf.

"Heavy fighting was taking place in the middle of the day on the Malahidh front after the army took total control of Jebel Khazaen," in the north of the region, army spokesman Askar Zuail told AFP. Malahidh, in the west of hilly Saada province, stronghold of the rebellion, has been a key battleground since the army launched its "Operation Scorched Earth" against the rebels on August 11.

The region borders Saudi Arabia, whose forces have been shelling and bombing rebel positions in on Jebel al-Dukhan mountain since November 4, after rebels killed a border guard and occupied two small villages inside Saudi territory the previous day. The Yemeni side of 2,000-metre Jebel al-Dukhan is within the Malahidh district. The rebels, also known as Huthis, called for the Arab League to intervene to stop "Saudi aggression" in an open letter to to Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa posted on their website on Monday. The letter denied the rebels are linked to any outside party or entity, a reference to accusations by Yemen that the Huthis are supported by Iran.

The insurgents called on the Arab League "to carry out an on-the-spot investigation" and "to support a national dialogue within an Arab framework between the rebels and the Yemen authorities." In a separate statement, rebel leader Yahya Huthi praised Iran for condemning "Saudi aggression" on Yemen, and thanked Iran for its stance, which was "absent from many of our Arab brothers."

Sources in the Saudi military told AFP on Monday that Huthis were hiding in some Saudi villages that have been evacuated in Hurrath and Khubah provinces. The Saudi military has shelled some of these areas, military sources said. UN children's organisation UNICEF said last week that the Saudis had evacuated 240 villages and closed 50 schools as the fighting spilled over the border from Yemen. The Yemeni Defence Ministry said on Monday said that the army regained control of several hills in the Gharaz area southeast of Saada and cleared them landmines.

Three rebels who were trying to infiltrate Saudi Arabia were arrested by the Yemeni army in an operation in Saada, around 240 kilometers north of Sanaa, and two were arrested in a separate military operation in Aleb, a frontier post north of Saada, the ministry said on its website. The Yemeni army spokesman said intermittent "minor clashes" have taken place in Harf Sufian province, adjoining Saada.

A Saudi cleric on Monday accused Houthi rebels of working with Iran to try to spread Shiism. "Iranian cooperation with Houthi rebels in Yemen is a collusion for sin and aggression," Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul-Aziz al-Sheikh said in remarks published on Monday. "Houthi infiltrators entered our territories, so ... it is obvious that they should be fought since the kingdom here is defending itself," Sheikh said.
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Africa Horn
Arab League chief calls for urgent Somalia aid
2009-10-14
[Iran Press TV Latest] Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa has drawn attention to the deplorable conditions in Somalia, urging Arab states to "immediately" assist the war-torn nation.

Moussa decried the living standards in the African nation as "barely fit for humans", where hundreds of thousands of children are suffering from malnutrition, Press TV reported Moussa as saying on Tuesday.

"We need to save Somalia...It is our duty to help our Arab brothers," the Secretary General added.

Arab League's urgent call for aid follows recent reports by human rights organizations, describing the crisis in Somalia as the single biggest humanitarian challenge in the world.

According to the international aid organization, Oxfam, there are currently over 3.6 million people, or half of Somalia's population, in desperate need of aid.

Adding to the crisis are over 1.3 million internally displaced people, and another half a million refugees who reside in impoverished camps in neighboring countries.

The suffering and mass exodus of Somalis come at a time when Somalia is also struggling with its worst drought in a decade.

Somalia has lacked a functioning government since 1991. The new government of President Sharif Ahmed, elected in January, has been fighting an intense battle with rebels, especially in the capital Mogadishu.

The clashes have left hundreds of people dead this month alone.

However, even as conflicts rage within Somalia, both private and government donors are reluctant to throw money in a state as disorganized as this Horn of African nation, where a weak, UN-backed, interim government struggles to contain a bloody insurgency.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Mash'al: Arab states must not rush to normalize Israel ties
2009-09-07
Ma'an/Agencies -- Senior Hamas leader Khalid Mash'al on Sunday warned Arab states to be wary of Israel's proposal to temporarily slow settlement construction in exchange for normalization of ties, describing it as a "dangerous equation."

"There is an Israeli effort to avoid the American demands, Mash'al said, referring to US call for a total settlement freeze. "We warn against any Arab rush toward normalization."

Speaking during a news conference in Cairo on Sunday, Mash'al said he welcomed the Obama administration's calls for a settlement freeze, but said he awaited concrete US measures in the peace process

The Hamas political chief was referring to reports that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to demand a normalization of relations with Arab states in exchange for a partial freeze on illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Mash'al, who lives in exile in Damascus, Syria, was speaking alongside Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa after the two held meetings on the internal Palestinian conflict and the larger Arab-Israeli confrontation.
It would indeed be difficult for Hamas to normalize relations with an entity they are committed to destroy and replace.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Moussa: Halt all settlement construction
2009-05-31
[Jerusalem Post Middle East] Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa said Friday it will become impossible to establish a Palestinian state unless Israel halts settlement construction in the West Bank immediately.

Moussa said the population in the West Bank is changing rapidly as the Israelis continue to build, making a two-state solution more unlikely as time goes by. "If they continue this policy of changing the demographic composition ... of the territories, it will be practically impossible to establish a Palestinian state - a viable Palestinian state," Moussa said. "This is the point that makes or breaks."

His comments came a day after US President Barack Obama met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and also called for a halt to the settlements, while urging the Palestinians to be more accepting of their Israeli neighbors.

Israel, however, has rejected US requests to freeze the construction in the West Bank, a territory that would make up the Palestinian state, along with the Gaza Strip, as part of a broader peace deal.

Moussa expressed cautious optimism in the Obama White House, noting that its approach toward Israel appears to be more "blunt" than that of preceding administrations. He said US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's strongly worded call for a stop to the settlements earlier this week was "a welcome change."
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Arabia
Amr Moussa chats up Russian envoy regarding Sudan
2009-04-09
CAIRO, April 7 (KUNA) — Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa discussed on Tuesday with Russian special envoy to Sudan Mikhail Margelov developments concerning the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the arrest warrant for President Omar Al-Bashir. The spokesman for Arab League Abdul-Aleem Al-Abyad told reporters that Moussa and Margelov, who is currently visiting Egypt to consult on the situation in Sudan, discussed the best ways to help Sudan out of this impasse. Talks between the two highlighted various challenges facing Sudan and how to overcome such challenges to maintain peace in Darfur region, Al-Abyad said. The spokesman also said the two discussed providing a suitable atmosphere to support stability, peace and development throughout Sudan.
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Africa Horn
Bashir arrives in Qatar for Arab summit despite arrest warrant
2009-03-30
(Xinhua) -- Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir arrived here Sunday to attend the Arab League summit scheduled for March 30-31 in the Qatari capital of Doha despite the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for him.

Bashir was received in the Doha International Airport by Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani and Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa. The plane he has taken is printed with the English word of " Sudan," which means that Bashir took a plane of the airline of his own country.

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