Sunday Star-Times

EU offers to police border crossings

Hamas agreement on long-term truce may be close but Israel emphasises security demands must be met.

- AP, AFP

THE EUROPEAN Union has offered to take charge of Gaza’s border crossings and work to prevent illegal arms flows, insisting on a durable truce and saying a return to the status quo before the latest war ‘‘is not an option’’.

As EU foreign ministers held an urgent meeting in Brussels about global conflicts, Hamas negotiator­s met with the Islamic militant group’s leadership in Qatar to discuss a proposal for a long-term truce with Israel. An official said the group was inclined to accept the Egyptian-mediated offer.

The Gaza blockade remains the main stumbling block. It has greatly limited the movement of Palestinia­ns in and out of the territory of 1.8 million people, restricted the flow of goods into Gaza and blocked virtually all exports.

The EU is prepared ‘‘to play a strong role’’ in managing the crossings while assuring that Israel’s security is guaranteed, said the 28-nation bloc’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton.

The EU offered to reactivate and extend its monitoring of the Rafah crossing with Egypt and other border posts, provided there will be a United Nations Security Council mandate for the mission and a sustainabl­e ceasefire in place.

In addition, the EU says Israel must lift its blockade to allow ‘‘a fundamenta­l improvemen­t in the living conditions for the Palestinia­n people in Gaza’’.

The EU foreign ministers said the bloc is also prepared to prevent arms smuggling and launch a training programme for Palestinia­n Authority police and customs officers to be deployed in Gaza.

‘‘The situation in the Gaza Strip has been unsustaina­ble for many years and a return to the status quo prior to the latest conflict is not an option,’’ they said.

Israel and Hamas are observing a five-day temporary ceasefire in an attempt to allow indirect talks in Cairo to continue. The negotiatio­ns are meant to secure a substantiv­e end to the month-long Gaza war.

Hamas is demanding the lifting of the blockade Israel and Egypt imposed after the militant group seized power in Gaza in 2007.

Israeli officials have said little about the negotiatio­ns, saying only that the country’s security needs must be met.

Representa­tives of Palestinia­n factions in Cairo said progress was being made. A Hamas official said his group had all but accepted the offer and was finalising the wording.

‘‘The proposed agreement states in many places that lifting the blockade will come through measures and mechanisms agreed upon between Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority, and this means Israel will always have the upper hand,’’ he said.

But he also said the emerging deal would end hostilitie­s and answer some immediate Hamas needs, including providing materials for reconstruc­tion.

Israel says the blockade is necessary to prevent arms smuggling, and officials are reluctant to make any concession­s that would allow Hamas to declare victory.

Israel, meanwhile, has demanded that Hamas, which has an arsenal of several thousand rockets, some of which can reach major Israeli cities, be disarmed – a non-starter for the militant group – or at the very least be prevented from re-arming.

The current ceasefire is the longest to be declared since the war broke out last month. Fighting has so far killed more than 1900 Palestinia­ns, the majority civilians, according to Palestinia­n and UN officials. Israel has lost 67 people, all but three of them soldiers.

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? Shadow of war: Palestinia­ns pray outside a mosque hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City, as the European Union leads efforts for an enduring ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
Photo: Reuters Shadow of war: Palestinia­ns pray outside a mosque hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City, as the European Union leads efforts for an enduring ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

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