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Sharon Congratulates Abbas in Phone Call
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Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005
JERUSALEM -- Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon called Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday to congratulate him for winning the Palestinian presidential elections, the latest sign that the two sides are eager to restart peace efforts after years of stalemate.

Since Abbas' landslide victory on Sunday, Israel and the Palestinians have signaled their readiness to return to the negotiating table. The election, along with the formation of a new Israeli government that includes the dovish Labor Party, have raised hopes around the world that talks might soon resume.

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  Tuesday's phone call, confirmed by Israeli and Palestinian officials, was the first direct contact between the two leaders since the election.

Sharon ``congratulated him on his personal achievement and his victory in the elections and wished him luck,'' said a statement issued by the prime minister's office. ``They agreed they would continue talking in the near future.''

Earlier Tuesday, Sharon told his new Cabinet that he hoped to meet Abbas in the ``near future.'' He told the ministers the meeting would focus on security issues, especially efforts to ``halt terrorism,'' according to participants.

Abbas is widely considered more moderate than his predecessor, Yasser Arafat, who died on Nov. 11 in a French hospital.

Israel refused to negotiate with Arafat, accusing him of encouraging violence during the past four years of fighting between the sides.

Fresh from his victory, Abbas expressed hope late Monday that the sides will be able to return to the negotiating table.

``We extend our hands to our neighbors,'' Abbas said. ``We are ready for peace, peace based on justice. We hope that their response will be positive.''

Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia said plans for the meeting were still in an early stage. ``When the right time comes, we will go for a well-prepared meeting. We will not go just for a meeting, but for a useful one,'' he said.

After shunning Arafat for the last four years, Israeli officials have said they are eager to get to work with Abbas.

A senior Israeli Defense Ministry official said Tuesday that Israel is ready to hand over to the Palestinians security duties in West Bank cities.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said discussions with the Palestinians on the issue would likely begin in the coming days.

Israel has had security control over all West Bank cities since launching a large offensive in April 2002 in response to a suicide bombing that killed 29 people in the Israeli coastal city of Netanya. But it eased its military presence ahead of Sunday's election, raising the possibility of a more permeant pullback.

Israel has said progress in peacemaking will be linked to Abbas' ability to take on Palestinian militants.

The Hamas and Islamic Jihad militant groups have said they are ready to work with Abbas, but so far resisted his calls for a cease-fire.

Hamas militants fired several barrages of mortar bombs and homemade rockets at Israeli towns and Jewish settlements in Gaza Tuesday.

No one was wounded, but several buildings - including a synagogue packed with worshippers - were damaged.

An Israeli wounded Jan. 2 in a Palestinian rocket attack on the Erez crossing - the main Israel-Gaza border point - died of his injuries on Tuesday.

Abbas has criticized the militants' attacks as damaging to the Palestinian cause. But he is reluctant to openly confront the militants, hoping instead to persuade them to accept a cease-fire.

Sharon, meanwhile, could face difficulties holding together his fragile coalition long enough to implement his plan to withdraw from the Gaza Strip and four West Bank settlements by the end of the year.

Sharon formed the coalition with the dovish Labor Party late Monday after narrowly winning a 58-56 vote in parliament.

Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told the Cabinet on Tuesday that he expects the pullout, initially envisioned as a unilateral initiative, would be coordinated with the new Palestinian leadership. The pullout is scheduled to begin in July.

In the meantime, the Defense Ministry has asked Attorney General Meni Mazuz to review the legal implications of a plan to build a trench along a key patrol road on the Israel-Gaza border.

Defense officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said digging the trench would require the demolition of 200 to 3,000 Palestinian homes in the border town of Rafah.

Military planners say the trench is the best way to prevent weapons smugglers from digging tunnels under the border. Militants have used tunnels to plant explosives under Israeli military installations.

Palestinian Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat condemned the idea, calling it ``a catastrophe and a disaster for the Palestinian people.''

The Israeli army has demolished hundreds of homes in Gaza over the past four years, saying the structures are used for cover by militants.

The Palestinians and human rights groups have condemned the practice, which has left thousands of Palestinians homeless.

Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press

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