Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home |   security |   politics |   diplomacy |   anti-semitism |   culture |   travel |   views | today's weblog  
 
Israel-American Relations

   



 
Sign up for free!

E-mail
 
         
       
         









Bill Gates is coming to Israel
Washington to Israel: Leave Syria to us
Views: Hashem and The Hurricanes
Views: Israel will lose everything it does not fight for
US, Israel mull Assad's replacement in Syria
Views: Help the victims of Katif, not just Katrina
Views: Creative Chaos
New U.S. ambassador arrives, admits ignorance about Israel
Kurtzer vows U.S. will support some Israeli settlements

 
Rice calls on borders to be opened for Palestinian economic development
By Israel Insider staff and partners  October 26, 2005
 
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice suggested Tuesday that Israel must loosen controls at border crossings to allow freer passage for Palestinians and economic development in areas that would one day be an independent Palestinian state.

Rice spoke in the Canadian capital a day after reports that a top Mid East envoy had criticized Israel for moving too slowly on negotiations to open borders around the Gaza Strip.

Israel withdrew troops and settlers from Gaza over the summer after nearly 30 years. The territory, now under Palestinian control, is on the other side of Israel from the larger Palestinian-controlled areas of the Judea and Samaria, and Palestinians must cross Israel or go through Egypt to pass between the two areas.

"It is very clear that the crossings issues need to get resolved," Rice said.

She did not specifically call on Israel to change its border policies, but did not dispute the findings of envoy James Wolfensohn that Israel was stalling in the restoration of movement across the borders.

Wolfensohn, the former World Bank president now working as a special envoy on behalf of the United States and other foreign mediators, said the delay was preventing him from moving on to larger reconstruction efforts, such as tourism, agriculture and industrial projects.

Borders "need to get freed up so that the kind of economic program we all want to see in the Palestinian territories" can begin, Rice said.

Wolfensohn is "simply asking the parties to do everything they can now that the Israelis are out of the Gaza to make sure that the Gaza is going to be a place where Palestinians can see a different kind of life and therefore start to build the foundations for a Palestinian state," she said.

In an Oct. 17 letter to the U.N. secretary-general obtained by The Associated Press, Wolfensohn said Israel was behaving almost as if the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip never happened.

Without dramatic progress soon, a rare chance to revive Gaza's shattered economy -- and the peace process -- will be lost, he said.

Israel closed the Rafah crossing into Egypt, Gaza's main link to the outside world, shortly before it withdrew from Gaza. It also has severely restricted the passage of Palestinian laborers and goods in and out of Israel, the main Palestinian export market, since a wave of rocket terror attacks on Israel right after the pullout.

Israeli officials say the measures are solely because of security considerations.

Wolfensohn acknowledged such concerns but said Israel and the Palestinians should be able to quickly resolve differences over borders, despite evidence to the contrary.

The AP contributed to this report.


 Talk Back! Respond to this article



Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |