Talks set for today, even as PM blames PA incitement for Passover murder
Israelis, Palestinians to extend peace negotiations past their April 29 deadline, despite Monday evening’s terrorist attack that killed a police officer on his way to a Seder in Kiryat Arba; White House urges restraint.
By HERB KEINON
Israeli-Palestinian contacts to extend negotiations past their April 29 deadline continue, despite Monday evening’s terrorist attack that killed a police officer on his way with his family to a Seder in Kiryat Arba.The negotiations were to continue on Wednesday, even as Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu held the Palestinian Authority responsible for the murder.“This reprehensible murder of a man who was traveling with his family to a meal for the Festival of Freedom is the result of the incitement for which the Palestinian Authority is responsible,” Netanyahu said.“The Palestinian Authority continues to constantly broadcast – in its official media – programs that incite against the existence of the State of Israel,” he added.“Last night this incitement was translated into the murder of a father who was traveling with his family to celebrate the first night of Passover.The incitement of the Palestinian Authority continues in that it has yet to see fit to condemn this abominable and reprehensible act.”One government official, who refrained from speculating on how the murder in the South Hebron Hills would affect Israel’s willingness to release Palestinian terrorists in order to get the Palestinians to extend the talks, said “there can be no peace without security,” and that the attack “demonstrates that we have to have iron clad security arrangements in any agreement.”State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki, at her daily briefing in Washington on Tuesday, condemned the attack and said the US supports “Israel’s efforts to bring those responsible to justice.”At the same time, she urged “all parties to exercise restraint and avoid any action that would raise tensions.”Psaki said Israeli and Palestinian negotiators would meet on Wednesday to discuss extending the negotiations. This will be the second meeting in four days between the sides without the participation of American envoy Martin Indyk, who is in the US. The two sides met for some three hours late on Sunday night.
“There are naturally a range of issues being discussed,” she said. “There are steps both parties would need to take to improve the conditions for peace, but the parties remain highly engaged. Both parties tell us they want negotiations to continue, and they are searching for a path to do just that.”Asked whether the administration agreed with a New York Times editorial on Tuesday that the US should lay down the principles it feels should govern an agreement and then “move on and devote their attention to other major international challenges like Ukraine,” Psaki said that neither she, nor the negotiators, nor the parties involved nor US Secretary of State John Kerry accepted that notion.