Newsflash

By Haaretz Service

Outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said in remarks published Monday that Israel would have to withdraw from East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights if it was serious about making peace with the Palestinians and Syria.

In an interview with the Yedioth Aharonoth daily, Olmert said that as a hard-line politician for decades he had not been prepared to look at reality in all of its depth.

"Ariel Sharon spoke about painful costs and refused to elaborate," Olmert told the daily. "I say, we have no choice but to elaborate. In the end of the day, we will have to withdraw from the most decisive areas of the territories. In exchange for the same territories left in our hands, we will have to give compensation in the form of territories within the State of Israel."

"I think we are very close to an agreement," Olmert added.

These comments were the clearest sign to date of Olmert's willingness to meet key Palestinian demands in peace talks.

With regard to the Syria track, Olmert added that a future peace agreement required a pullout from the Golan Heights, an area under Israeli control since the 1967 Six-Day War.

"First and foremost, we must make a decision. I'd like to see if there is one serious person in the State of Israel who believes it is possible to make peace with the Syrians without eventually giving up the Golan Heights."

"It is true that an agreement with Syria comes with danger," he said. "Those who want to act with zero danger should move to Switzerland."

Yedioth Aharonoth noted that in this "legacy interview," published on the eve of the Jewish New Year, Olmert went further in making offers for peace than he ever did publicly when he was in active office and had greater power to see them carried out.

The interview was met with fierce criticism from politicians on both the right and the left.

MK Yuval Steinitz said the comments demonstrated the outgoing leader's readiness "to ignore even the most crucial" of Israel's needs.

"The prime minister's concession the essential borders of defense is a gamble on the bone of existence, and the future of the State of Israel," Steinitz told Army Radio in response to Olmert's comments.

"Ignoring the distance between rockets fired from afar and the enemy sitting on top of Jerusalem reveals how little he understands the basis of security," Steinitz added.

Former Meretz chairman Yossi Beilin criticized Olmert for having offered such concessions only on the eve of his departure from premiership.

"Olmert has committed the unforgivable sin of revealing his truce stance on Israel's national interest just when he has nothing left to lose," said Beilin.

According to Western and Palestinian officials, Olmert has proposed in peace talks with the Palestinians an Israeli withdrawal from some 93 percent of the West Bank, plus all of the Gaza Strip, from which Israel pulled out in 2005.

The negotiations, which Olmert has vowed to continue until he leaves office when a new government is formed, have shown few signs of progress and both sides acknowledge chances are slim of meeting Washington's target of a deal by the end of the year.

Olmert has also engaged Syria in indirect negotiations with Turkish mediation, but has not remarked publicly on the scope of an Israeli pullout from the Golan Heights.

Olmert has said repeatedly that Israel intends to keep major Jewish settlement blocs in the West Bank in any future peace deal with the Palestinians.

A peace agreement, Olmert has said, would mean Israel would have to compensate the Palestinians for the land it hopes to retain by "close to a 1-to-1 ratio."

In exchange for the settlement enclaves, Olmert has proposed about a 5 percent land swap giving the Palestinians a desert territory adjacent to the Gaza Strip, as well as land on which to build a transit corridor between Gaza and the West Bank.

He has so far put off negotiations on sharing Jerusalem and ruled out a so-called "right of return" for Palestinian refugees, a central Palestinian demand. On both issues, there is strong opposition in Israel to significant concessions.

Olmert, who has stepped down in the face of a possible criminal indictment in a corruption investigation, will remain caretaker prime minister until a new government is approved by parliament.

A week ago, President Shimon Peres asked Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, now leader of Olmert's centrist Kadima party, to try to put together a governing coalition within six weeks. Failure to do so would likely lead to a parliamentary election.

 

 
Home arrow Opinion Articles arrow Ethiopia's hidden horrors
Ethiopia's hidden horrors PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 11 July 2008

JAMAL OSMAN | NAIROBI

Suleikha Mohamed Adan, a 30-year-old widow and mother of five, was living a difficult nomadic life in the harsh Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia when government soldiers came to her house and arrested her.

Her husband and father were killed last year by government forces, who accused them of the same crime for which she was arrested: sympathising with the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), a group fighting for self-determination for the Ogaden region.

"My five children were crying when they tied my hands behind my back and kicked me to the ground," said Adan, who now lives in Kenya, as she wiped the tears from her face. "I was blindfolded and they threw me like a ball on to a military truck."

After two nights, Adan found herself in an underground prison in the town of Godey where she was kept for 15 months with hundreds of other prisoners.

"Soldiers would take me out to beat me up and sometimes rape me," she said, sitting in her room in Eastleigh, Nairobi. "Younger women were the soldiers' favourites. While I was there I saw two old men hanged from the roof with a wire and they both died."

Adan escaped and feels very lucky to have got away from the worsening situation in Ogaden, a region that has been embroiled in conflict for decades.

Somalia and Ethiopia have twice gone to war over the region, which is populated by ethnic Somalis, and which each country claims as part of its territory.

The Ethiopian military campaign has intensified since the ONLF attacked a Chinese-run oil installation in April last year, killing 75 people, including nine Chinese workers.

A report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) released late last month accuses the Ethiopian regime of committing widespread abuses against civilians. "The Ethiopian army's answer to the rebels has been to viciously attack civilians in Ogaden," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at HRW.

"These widespread and systematic atrocities amount to crimes against humanity. Yet Ethiopia's major donors -- Washington, London and Brussels -- seem to be maintaining a conspiracy of silence around the crimes."

Ethiopia has become a close ally of the United States since the September 11 2001 attacks. Western governments and institutions -- including the US, the United Kingdom, and the European Union -- give the country at least $2billion in aid each year.

Many of the civilians living in the conflict zone in Ogaden are nomads who are constantly on the move in search of fresh grazing.

Maryan Nur Ahmed (52) said her house, in a village near the town of Shilabo, was raided at night by the Ethiopian military.

Jailed by Ethiopian forces, she was repeatedly tortured but the soldiers considered her too old to be raped. Instead, they raped her daughter when she visited the prison.

"They used to say [an] old woman is [no use]," said Ahmed, who is now also in exile in Kenya. "I have 10 children, but my youngest child is the only one with me here in Kenya. I do not know if the others are safe."

She said that the soldiers often tortured and killed prisoners. After five of her fellow inmates were killed, she decided to escape. "One night, I realised the guard was falling asleep and I used my chest to walk like a snake," she said, describing how she wriggled out of the prison.

HRW has also condemned Ethiopian forces for imposing a series of measures aimed at cutting off economic support to the ONLF, including a trade blockade of the war-affected region and the obstruction of humanitarian assistance.

"The government's attacks on civilians, its trade blockade and restrictions on aid amount to the illegal collective punishment of tens of thousands of people," said Gagnon. "Unless humanitarian agencies get immediate access to independently assess the needs and monitor food distribution, more lives will be lost."

In July last year the Ethiopian government expelled the Red Cross from the region. It has since permitted some United Nations agencies and NGOs to operate, but only under tight controls.

HRW has also criticised the ONLF for violating the laws of war, including summary executions of Chinese and Ethiopian civilians during the Obole attack and the killing of suspected government collaborators.

The Ethiopian government has denied HRW's allegations. Foreign journalists who have attempted to conduct independent investigations have been arrested.

Source: Mail & Guardian Online

 
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