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Israeli Army Kills Palestinian Child in Jenin As Burns Talks Peace

Israeli tanks opened fire on a group of Palestinian youths, killing 13-year-old Ahmed

JENIN, Reoccupied West Bank, October 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A 13-year-old Palestinian child was killed by machine-gun fire from an Israeli tank in the northern West Bank town of Jenin Thursday, October 24, as U.S. Assistant Secretary of State William Burns presented a "roadmap" for peace to Israel’s leaders and a senior Palestinian delegation.

Ahmed Jafar died after Israeli tankfire hit him in the chest, Palestinian medical sources told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

As around 20 Israeli vehicles stormed the rubble-reduced Jenin refuge camp, a group of Palestinian children pelted an Israeli armored column with stones, after which Israeli tanks opened fire, killing Ahmed.

There were no other injuries in the shooting, the Palestinian sources told AFP, adding that the curfew in the reoccupied town was not in place.

With the murder of 13-year-old Ahmed, the Palestinian death toll during two years of Intifada against Israeli occupation has reached 1,934, according to AFP.

On the diplomatic front meanwhile, Burns held an early meeting with Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer and then went to Jericho - the only West Bank town not occupied by Israel for religious reasons - for talks with a senior Palestinian delegation.

He was to meet Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon later in the day to discuss the peace "roadmap" developed in conjunction with the United Nations, the European Union and Russia which should allow for an independent Palestinian state side by side with Israel within three years, said AFP.

Israel has given the plan an extremely cool reception, saying it prefers to stick to U.S. President George W. Bush's "vision" set out in a June speech, which also foresees Palestinian statehood in three years but with more conditions attached, including an end to elected Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's tenure of power.

Many Israeli analysts believe that the latest roadmap is aimed more at making a show of trying to calm the two-year Intifada or uprising against Israeli occupation, while Washington's interest really lies in whipping up regional support against Iraq.

Burns is also trying to urge Israeli restraint in the face of Palestinian retaliatory attacks - the latest of which killed at least 13 people, mostly soldiers, in a bus blast Monday, October 21 - to avoid a new flare-up of tensions.

The Israeli Premier blasted the "road map" peace plan draft presented to him in Washington last week, in his first public reference to it, telling a group of American Jews Wednesday, October 23: "It's not credible that Israel takes irreversible steps while the other side only makes statements," reported the Israeli Ha’aretz newspaper.

Sharon and his aides say they will not accept any deviation from Bush’s June 24 speech.

Sharon referred to the roadmap for the first time in public Wednesday during a meeting with representatives from the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League, saying it had "problematic" aspects.

"We have to stick to what was agreed in Washington regarding the Bush plan.

"It is of utmost importance that any progress to each stage be conditioned to the implementation of the previous stage."

Sharon conditioned any progress to halting the Palestinain Intifada and any kind of Palestinian resistance, adding that otherwise, "it will be impossible to move toward a demilitarized state without final borders" - his own version of a future Palestinain state.

"This is just a draft and we will express our reservations on certain points," an unidentified official from Sharon’s office told AFP, describing Burns’ roadmap.

"There is no question of the Israeli army making the least pullback [from occupied Palestinian territories] as the plan sets out until the Palestinian Authority decided to fight … [Islamic resistance movements] Islamic Jihad and Hamas and we see some results on the ground."

He stressed that the timetable in the plan, for a Palestinian state without fixed borders by next year, "doesn't appear realistic" even if Palestinians halted resistance attacks.

The Israeli official also voiced serious doubts about "the credibility of proposed supervision of the implementation of the quartet plan."

"It is difficult to leave it up to the European Union when E.U. officials recently held contacts with Hamas and Islamic Jihad," he said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, who met Burns late Wednesday, stressed that the plan was only an outline and that Israel would react by December.

Israeli government and defense officials are bitterly critical of the plan, which calls for comprehensive political and security reforms in the Palestinian Authority leading to a Palestinian state with temporary borders by the end of 2003, and a final status agreement by the end of 2005, said AFP.

Sources in Sharon’s office also have reservations about the inclusion of the Saudi Arabian peace plan as an element in the roadmap.

Sharon claims roadmap plan has "problematic" aspects

The Foreign Ministry is tilting toward accepting the plan, saying it is based on "gradualism, stages, and performance tests," but in the defense establishment there is stiff opposition to it because, cllaim officials, it misses the point of Bush's speech - that Israel’s security comes before all else.

The six-page plan has been worked out by the Middle East quartet committee, grouping the U.S., E.U., U.N., and Russia, and the Americans are now gathering Israeli, Palestinian and other regional comments on it before a final draft is approved by the quartet in December.

Among other things, the plan calls for Israel to withdraw to pre-Intifada lines, dismantle illegal settlements, and cease military offensives in Palestinian Authority areas.

The Palestinians are required to name a prime minister, reorganize their security forces into a single entity, and to reinstate security coordination and cooperation with Israel.

A new security cooperation agreement is envisaged.

The plan would put quartet supervisors in the territories to judge when the sides have reached each stage, so they can move onto the next one.

The official Palestinian news agency WAFA reported that U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said in a letter to Arafat that the best way out of the impasse would be to pursue the quartet's proposals.

While refusing to comment directly on the roadmap, Palestinian Local Government Minister Saeb Erekat, who led the Palestinian official delegation to the meeting with Burns, said: "I can see this plan is full of conditions."

He stressed that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and the Palestinian leadership would study it before giving any official reaction.

 

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