Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Tuesday, July 09, 2002
Israeli, Palestinian Ministers Talk Face-to-Face
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres met with Palestinian Finance Minister Salam Fayed on Monday, the first face-to-face contacts on that level in months, officials on both sides said.
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres met with Palestinian Finance Minister Salam Fayed on Monday, the first face-to-face contacts on that level in months, officials on both sides said.
Yoram Dori, a spokesman for Peres, said the meeting lasted about 90 minutes and covered economic issues. Palestinian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the session took place in a hotel in west Jerusalem, the Jewish side of the city.
Dori said the meeting was "the first of a series that will be held. There will be a continuation." He told the press that Peres will also meet other Palestinian officials.
With Israeli troops patrolling most Palestinian areas and the two sides trading bitter recriminations, government ministers have not held any publicly announced meetings recently.
The dovish Peres has said the Israeli and Palestinian leaders should remain in contact despite the violence. Israeli media reported that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had barred Peres from such meetings but has now given him permission to see Palestinian officials responsible for economic issues and government reforms.
Peres had been expected to host a Monday evening in Jerusalem with Fayed, and Interior Minister Abdel Razak Yehiyeh, according to Palestinian spokesmen Nabil Aburdeneh. Both ministers were appointed recently by Arafat during a Cabinet reshuffle.
The talks were to focus on ways to ease the burdens faced by about 700,000 Palestinians living in seven West Bank cities and towns under Israeli military control, according to an Israeli government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Palestinians said ministers from the two governments last met in March, a month of heavy bloodshed that culminated in a major Israeli invasion in the West Bank that lasted six weeks. The Israeli Foreign Ministry said it did not know the last time Cabinet ministers held face-to-face talks.
Top officials from the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia will meet at the United Nations next week to discuss their joint efforts to promote an end to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, diplomats said Monday.
The meeting will be attended by Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Secretary of State Colin Powell, and senior EU and Russian officials, the diplomats said.
The Quartet are expected to hold talks on July 15 and to be joined on July 16 by senior officials from Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan, the diplomats at the United Nations said, speaking on condition of anonymity.