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UN leader presses Middle East rivals to get back to talks
by Staff Writers
Amman (AFP) Jan 30, 2012


UN leader Ban Ki-moon starts a Middle East peace mission on Tuesday seeking to add to international pressure on the Israeli and Palestinian leaderships to return to direct negotiations.

The UN secretary general will hold talks in Amman with King Abdullah II and Jordan's Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, officials said.

On Wednesday, he will hold key meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank town of Ramallah, officials said.

Direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations have been frozen since September 2010. The two sides have had contacts in Amman this month but no breakthrough has been reported.

"My visit comes at an important moment," Ban told a press conference in New York last week when he announced the trip. "I will be there to encourage both sides to engage in earnest and create a positive atmosphere for moving forward."

Ban is also expected to meet Israeli President Shimon Peres and other top officials from both sides during his stay, UN officials said.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton went to Jerusalem and Ramallah last week to press Netanyahu and Abbas to pursue the contacts. The United States has also been putting diplomatic pressure on the two sides, diplomats said.

The United Nations is part of the diplomatic Quartet that has been seeking to broker a Middle East peace deal, along with the European Union, Russia and the United States.

The UN secretary general met with the Quartet envoy, Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, at the Davos forum in Switzerland last week, a UN spokesman said. Blair is believed to be back in Jerusalem now.

The Palestinians ended direct talks in 2010 in protest at Israel's refusal to extend a moratorium on settlement building in the occupied territories.

While the international powers have all condemned Israel's heightened settlement drive, the deadlock has also been increased by the Palestinians' bid to gain international recognition elsewhere, including with an application for full UN membership.

Palestinian and Israeli negotiators held five rounds of exploratory talks in Amman this month on whether there is a route back to direct negotiations.

Abbas has since been consulting with Palestinian leaders. He said he will also hold contacts with an Arab League committee on the Middle East conflict before deciding his next move.

"There are pressures from many sides, prodding them to return to talks. But there are also elements from many sides -- including events in Syria -- which are holding them back," one official close to the Quartet contacts with the Israelis and Palestinians told AFP.

Asked on Sunday about the prospects of renewed peace talks, the Israeli prime minister said: "The signs are not particularly propitious." Israel says however that the Amman meetings should continue.

The diplomatic Quartet called on October 26 for both sides to present comprehensive proposals on territory and security within three months, as a first step towards resuming direct talks.

Diplomats said the Quartet's main concern now is to make sure the unofficial contacts do not end.

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