Mid-East leaders gather for summit

Israel is reluctant to remove roadblocks and other West Bank restrictions to boost Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's new …

Israel is reluctant to remove roadblocks and other West Bank restrictions to boost Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's new government until he does more to curb militants, officials said ahead of a summit today.

The summit between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Abbas in Egypt follows an Israeli decision yesterday to transfer hundreds of millions of dollars to Abbas's government, formed after a violent takeover of the Gaza Strip by Islamist Hamas.

That [framework] means talking on the political level about an independent (Palestinian) state as a clear-cut goal of the moderates.
Mr Olmert's spokeswoman Miri Eisin

After its accord on the funds, Israel is resisting US pressure for it to uproot major roadblocks, checkpoints and outposts in the Israeli-occupied West Bank until Abbas reins in militants more effectively, the Israeli officials said.

Mr Olmert was expected at the summit in the Red Sea Resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to outline at least some of the measures he would be prepared to take to bolster Abbas's emergency government in the West Bank.

READ MORE

Today's talks, which will include Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Jordan's King Abdullah, will be the first since Hamas routed Abbas's Fatah forces and seized control of the Gaza Strip more than a week ago.

Mr Abbas responded to Gaza's takeover by sacking the unity government led by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas and by quickly forming an emergency government in the West Bank backed by the United States, the European Union and key Arab allies.

Mr Olmert said last night he would present security demands to Abbas. Israel's goal is to isolate Hamas economically, diplomatically and militarily in the Gaza Strip, while allowing funds to flow to Mr Abbas's new administration in the West Bank.

Mr Olmert's cabinet yesterday agreed to start unfreezing hundreds of millions of dollars in Palestinian tax revenues to help finance the emergency government.

"(Abbas's) government can be a partner if he will be serious about implementing (steps to curb militants), and I believe that the release of funds should be overseen by monitors to ensure that money is allocated to appropriate purposes," Housing Minister Meir Sheetrit said.

Mr Olmert's spokeswoman Miri Eisin said the summit would focus broadly on the "framework" for talks with Abbas going forward: "That means talking on the political level about an independent (Palestinian) state as a clear-cut goal of the moderates."

Washington has asked Olmert to take concrete steps to help Abbas, such as easing restrictions on Palestinian access to the Jordan Valley, as well as removing major barriers, checkpoints and roadblocks near major Palestinian population centres, including Hebron, Bethlehem and Nablus.

But an Israeli official involved in Israel's inter-agency deliberations said: "We're not giving any of that upfront."

"We want to be realistic," the senior official said. "The security posts are a risk for us. We live in the Middle East. We can respect the ideal of democracy but we live in reality ... One suicide bombing and we're back to square one."