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October 01, 1993 - Image 62

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-10-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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"ULTRA SAVINGS" e(l o '/61.
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ON THE NEW '93
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Israeli Delegation
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Jerusalem (JTA) — For the
first time ever, Israel has
sent an official delegation to
Tunis, in part to discuss ar-
rangements for Palestinian
self-rule with officials of the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization, which is head-
quartered there.
The trip is significant be-
cause Israel and Tunisia do
not have diplomatic rela-
tions. Last week, Tunisian
officials were quoted as say-
ing their government is
ready to establish relations
as soon as another Arab
country does so.
Currently, Egypt is the
only Arab country to have
diplomatic ties with Israel.
But in the wake of last
week's historic Israeli-PLO
agreement on self-rule,
several Arab countries, in-
cluding Morocco and the
Persian Gulf states, have in-
dicated interest in making
such a move.
The three members of the
Israeli delegation reportedly
were given a subdued recep-
tion by junior protocol offi-
cials of the Tunisian Foreign
Ministry.
According to news reports
from Tunis, the Interior
Ministry banned camera
crews from photographing
the delegation's arrival and
told reporters they could not
interview the three Israelis.
Officially, the Israeli team
is in Tunis to help lay the
groundwork for the next
round of multilateral talks
on refugees, scheduled to
convene there Oct. 12-14.
But the team was also ex-
pected to take part in discus-
sions with PLO officials on a
variety of technical issues
concerning the establishing
of a Palestinian self-
governing authority in the
Gaza Strip and West Bank
town of Jericho.
The mission is the latest
indication that Israel's top
priority in the peace process
at the moment is implemen-
ting the agreement on Pales-
tinian self-rule. .
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin made that clear dur-
ing his meeting with Hosni
Mubarak at the Egyptian
president's summer
residence in Alexandria.
Despite that stated priori-
ty, the two leaders devoted
most of their meeting to
discussing the prospects of
peace with Syria.
Mr. Rabin is reported to
have told Mr. Mubarak that

Syria must curb attacks by
the Islamic fundamentalist
Hezbollah movement before
any meaningful progress can
be made toward a peace
agreement with Israel.
"The purpose of our
negotiations with Syria is to
achieve a peace treaty," Mr.
Rabin told reporters after
the meeting. "We will con-
tinue to negotiate, but at
this stage I see the key issue
as good implementation of
the agreements that were
reached with the Palestin-
ians."
But Mr. Mubarak was op-
timistic that Israel would
soon reach an agreement

Hafez Assad:
Agreement in the offing?

with the regime of Syrian
President Hafez Assad.
"I think Syria genuinely
wants peace. I heard this
from President Assad
several times," Mr. Muba-
rak said at a joint news con-
ference after the summit
meeting.
And in an interview with
Israel Radio, Foreign Min-
ister Shimon Peres said
peace with Syria could be
reached without delay if
Damascus helps set the right
tone.
"We don't criticize
anybody," Mr. Peres said,
referring to Syria, "but we
feel peace must be (reached)
in the proper air."
Mr. Rabin has recently ex-
pressed his open distrust of
Mr. Assad, saying that the
Syrian leader offers peace
"with one hand," but "with
the other hand" gives his
support to militant Palestin-
ian group based on Syrian
soil.
Mr. Assad has given only
qualified support to the
Israeli-PLO agreement, and

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