The Palestinian Authority and Israel agreed on Monday, to delay the summit between the Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, and the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, until November, due to differences and disagreement which could doom the summit to failure.
Israeli online daily Haaretz reported that the meeting was during a phone call between P.A cabinet minister Sa’eb Erekat, and Sharon’s advisor Dov Weisglass.
Erekat said that the substance of the meeting is more important than its timing; the statements of Erekat came after his meeting with U.S. assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, David Welch.
Also, Erekat added that the P.A is seeking the release of 20 detainees who have spent more than 20 years in Israeli prisons, and Israeli military withdrawal from West Bank city, beginning in Bethlehem.
Sharon and Abbas were slated to meet on Tuesday but Israel rejected to respond to the Palestinian demands to release Palestinian detainees arrested before 1993, and further military withdrawals from the West Bank.
Apparently, Abbas-Sharon summit will take place at the beginning of November after Abbas returns from Washington.
An Israeli political source reported that Sharon and Abbas were originally slated to meet next month, but the Abbas was asked by the U.S. administration to hold the meeting prior to his visit to the States.
‘They asked, and we agreed,’ the Israeli source stated, ‘but the American administration wanted Abbas and Sharon to meet before Abbas travelsâ€Â.
“Israel is still rejecting to release Palestinian detainees arrested before 1993, and is still rejecting to implement the Sharm Al Sheikh understandingâ€Â, a P.A source said, “There are still several differences which remains unsolved, such as operating the Rafah border crossing with being monitored by Israel, the safe passage between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, the deportees, and the release of Ahmad Saadat, the secretary general of the Popular Front from the P.A prison in Jerichoâ€Â.