SUNDAY OBSERVER Sunday Observer - Magazine
Sunday, 14 December 2003  
The widest coverage in Sri Lanka.
World
News

Business

Features

Editorial

Security

Politics

World

Letters

Sports

Obituaries

Archives

Mihintalava - The Birthplace of Sri Lankan Buddhist Civilization

Silumina  on-line Edition

Government - Gazette

Daily News

Budusarana On-line Edition





U.S. envoy meets Palestinian PM, urges peace steps

ABU DIS, West Bank, Dec 13 (Reuters)

A U.S. envoy urged Israel and the Palestinians on Saturday to take real steps to put into motion a U.S.-backed peace "road map" whose revival awaits a still-unscheduled meeting of their prime ministers.

But bullets again spoke louder than words in the West Bank, where Israeli troops at a spot roadblock shot dead a 20-year-old Palestinian woman travelling in a taxi.

"We very much hope that concrete steps can be taken by all sides on all of the issues necessary to see progress restored," U.S. official David Satterfield, asked about the road map, told reporters after meeting Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurie.

Satterfield, deputy assistant secretary of state for Near East affairs, met Qurie two days after declaring that Palestinian government reform key to the peace plan had all but ground to a halt.

In an assessment prepared for the "Quartet" of Middle East peacemakers -- the United States, the United Nations, the European Union and Russia -- Satterfield also accused Israel of failing to ease tough travel restrictions on Palestinians.

The road map, the most ambitious move Washington has made towards ending three years of violence and reviving peacemaking, calls for reciprocal steps leading to the creation of a Palestinian state by 2005.

Speaking to reporters, Qurie said no date had been set for talks with his Israeli counterpart, Ariel Sharon, on moving along the road map. Israel Radio said a summit was unlikely in the coming week and officials planned more preparatory meetings.

In an interview with the mass circulation daily Yedioth Ahronoth on Friday, Qurie warned Israel that an internationally condemned barrier it is building inside the West Bank would kill the peace plan.

Sharon has hinted he will evacuate some Jewish settlements and set borders for a Palestinian state along the barrier, whose planned route frequently dips into the West Bank to incorporate settlement blocs, should peace talks fail.

Israel says the swathe of razor-wire fencing, walls and trenches, is meant to keep suicide bombers out of its cities.

Near the West Bank city of Nablus, Israeli soldiers fired at a taxi which a military source said burst through a spot roadblock and ignored warning shots to stop.

Palestinian medics said Kamleh al-Shooli, 20, one of eight passengers in the vehicle, was killed by two bullets to the chest. Two passengers who spoke to Reuters after the incident said the soldiers had not signalled for the taxi to stop.

STONE 'N' STRING

www.ppilk.com

Call all Sri Lanka

www.singersl.com

www.crescat.com

www.srilankaapartments.com

www.peaceinsrilanka.org

www.helpheroes.lk


News | Business | Features | Editorial | Security
Politics | World | Letters | Sports | Obituaries


Produced by Lake House
Copyright 2001 The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd.
Comments and suggestions to :Web Manager


Hosted by Lanka Com Services