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Palestinian President Abbas met Syrian president Assad on Sunday briefing him on the Middle East peace process and ways to achieve Palestinian reconciliation.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas met Syrian president Bashar Assad on Sunday briefing him on the Middle East peace process and ways to achieve Palestinian reconciliation.

Abbas was wrapping up a two-day visit to Damascus as part of a tour to Middle East and Asian countries.

Abbas was in the Syrian capital for a two-day visit to brief the Syrian leadership on Palestinian reconciliation efforts.

Abbas said Sunday the rift between his Fatah and Hamas must end.

"No one is happy to see the current divisions continuing," Abbas told reporters in Damascus following a meeting with Syrian President Bashar Assad.

"No one would ever respect us if we go on," he said.

Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal aslo said Sunday "we have reached a formula and we ask God to give it success," he said in Doha, Qatar.

Mashaal said the time is now right because the Americans and Israelis were busy with internal problems. "This is an opportunity God has given us," he said.

After Abbas-Assad meeting, Palestinian Authority chief negotiator Saeb Erakat said that Egypt is now exerting intensive efforts on this matter, noting that a statement from Cairo in this regard will be published soon, and thereafter, there will be a comprehensive meeting with all Palestinian parties involved.


Agencies

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow US Navy says pirate attack stopped in Gulf of Aden
US Navy says pirate attack stopped in Gulf of Aden PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 08 August 2008

 

Picture: (AFP/US NAVY/File/Daniel Sanford)- A suspected pirate looks over the edge of a skiff in international waters off the coast of Somalia in 2006.

The U.S. Navy says it has stopped a pirate attack on a merchant vessel north of Somalia in the Gulf of Aden.

The Navy says the USS Peleliu responded to a call for help from the Gem of Kilakari this morning. The ship says it was under attack from armed pirates as it was traveling to the Suez Canal.

The Navy's Bahrain-based 5th Fleet says in a statement that the USS Peleliu was about 16 kilometers away from the Gem of Kilakari when it received the distress call.

The Navy says the suspected pirate ships fled the scene after the USS Peleliu launched three helicopters. The Navy says one grenade landed on the Gem of Kilakari's bridge wing but didn't explode, and no injuries were reported.

MRN-AP

 

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