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Killed and inherited. Not only was his family home not destroyed, as Israel did in the past, but Israel handed over Tulkarem and its surrounding villages to the PA.
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Israel, Palestinians fail to work out Jericho handover
Pipes: Good news in Mideast may not last
Israel to hand over towns to PA in coming days
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Israel: no peace moves until Palestinians crack down on terror

 
Palestinians: Israel to hand over west bank hometown of Tel Aviv bomber
By Associated Press  March 6, 2005
 
Although the suicide bomber who killed five and wounded fifty in Tel Aviv last week came from a village near Tulkarem, Israel will hand over the West Bank town to Palestinian control this week, a senior Palestinian commander said Sunday, marking the resumption of confidence-building measures halted after the bombing.

However, Israel denied the report and said that any withdrawal would only follow a successful meeting of DM Mofaz and PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas.

Jericho was originally to be first city transferred, but the two sides failed to agree on how much territory would be involved.

Israeli and Palestinian commanders met Sunday for the first time since the Feb. 25 bombing, attributed to the Islamic Jihad, leading Israel to freeze the handover of five towns and release of 400 more prisoners, agreed on last month when Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas declared a truce to end four years of bloodshed.

Tulkarem is next to the northern part of the "green line" delineation between Israel and the West Bank, at Israel's narrowest point. The Palestinians will control a city just ten miles from Israel's Mediterranean coastline.

The senior Palestinian participant in the Sunday talks, West Bank commander Haj Ismail Jabber, told the Associated Press, "it was agreed in principle that the Israeli army will begin Tuesday withdrawing from Tulkarm and the areas around the town, and afterward we will discuss the Israeli withdrawal from the other towns in the West Bank."

A senior Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said government approval was necessary before the pullout could begin. He said Tulkarem would be the first town to be handed over, if the Palestinians can fulfill their obligations.

Israeli officials said Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz would meet Abbas this week for the first time.

Also Sunday, Jordanian foreign minister Hani al-Mulqi met Israeli leaders, the first such visit in more than four years. Jordan recently named an ambassador after leaving its embassy vacant through most of the current conflict. Al-Mulqi called for intense peace efforts in meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Vice Premier Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, just before Shalom left for Washington.

U.S. officials said Sharon would visit the White House in mid-April, following the first trip to Washington by Mahmoud Abbas as Palestinian leader -- a reflection of renewed U.S. involvement in Mideast peacemaking in the post-Yasser Arafat era.

However, Shalom indicated the focus of his talks in Washington would be Syria and Lebanon, not the Palestinians.

"The purpose is to act to get Syrian troops out of Lebanon, include Hezbollah on the list of terror organizations, dismantle their terror infrastructure," Shalom said. Israel has welcomed international pressure on Syria to withdraw from Lebanon in the wake of last month's assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Syria was widely blamed but denied it was involved.

Israel and Syria, arch-enemies since the Jewish state was created in 1948, came close to a peace agreement in 2000, but the talks broke down.

Israel fought a bloody 18-year guerrilla war against Hezbollah before withdrawing its forces from south Lebanon in 2000. However, Hezbollah disputes the U.N.-drawn border and still attacks Israeli troops from time to time.

According to a statement from Sharon's office, he told the visiting Jordanian official that Abbas has made positive moves, like deploying Palestinian police in Gaza, but has yet to take active steps against militants. "As long as we make progress because of temporary calm, we are held hostage by the (violent) groups, which will destroy the process as they did in 2003."

In 2003, when Abbas was prime minister, he secured a cease-fire, met Sharon and Israel released some prisoners, but the process stopped there. Abbas lost prestige, argued with Arafat and quit his post after only four months in power -- and violence resumed with a vengeance.

"We have been saying for a long time that we want peace for future generations," al-Mulqi said after meeting Sharon. "Today we say we want peace for us first."

The AP contributed to this report.


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