Well, after 17 years of result-less rounds of negotiations, lets check the results....
1) Number of ILLEGAL Settlements and Settlers: DOUBLED
2) OCCUPATION remains the same
3) a new APARTHEID WALL
4) More suffer of Palestinian People.
5) Hunger in GAZA
6) NO PEACE.....
At the end of the day, Israel Talks about Commitment and about the Palestinian Partner. Even OBAMA, he did nothing on ground, only amazing speech. Why does Israel have the right to breach 4th Geneva Convention regarding settlements??? Why does Israel have the right not to Implement UNSCR? Why does Israel have the right to build the apartheid Wall, While ICJ says it is ILLEGAL and must be Removed??? Why does Israel has the right to destroy Palestinian homes in Jerusalem and West Bank??? and the list continues......
In my opinion, a 100% NON-VIOLENT resistance by Palestinians is the solution. We can read about Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela etc... and learn more from them. PLUS announce a Palestinian State unilaterally. It is our soil, our land, guaranteed by international law. We can't depend on USA, not anymore..... ONE DAY WE WILL BE FREE.....
Power Vacuum
Who will replace Mahmoud Abbas as the Palestinian president?
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Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas claimed yesterday that he won't run for reelection to the presidency in January. He said Israel's detrimental settlement policy in the occupied territories—and U.S. refusal to press Netanyahu's government on the matter—prompted his decision. He also attacked Hamas for thwarting efforts to reconcile the two Palestinian factions, Fatah and Hamas; the Hamas spokesman replied that Abbas "should turn to the Palestinian people and admit that the process has failed and that an emphasis should be given to the resistance, while undertaking genuine steps to achieve Palestinian reconciliation."
With the president's decision to step down, who will succeed him? Most likely, Abbas's successor will come from inside his own party, Fatah, which controls the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)—recognized internationally as the "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people," according to the Oslo agreement. Fatah also enjoys broad support among West Bank Palestinians, who comprise the majority of Palestinian voters—and are not likely to elevate a member of the rival Hamas government in Gaza to the presidency. Herein, we survey the competition. (Full disclosure: a family member works for the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority.)
Candidate: Ahmad (Abu Ala) Qurei
Age: 72 years old
Chances: low
The veteran Palestinian leader from Jerusalem joined Fatah in 1968 and has helped manage Palestinian financial and economic operations since the 1970s. As a member of Fatah's Central Committee, he played a key role in negotiating the Oslo Accords, which restored the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) to the occupied territories in 1993. Qurei also served as Prime Minister from 2003 until 2006, when Hamas defeated his Fatah party in legislative elections. A Qurei presidency would be welcomed by officials in the U.S. and Israel because of his long involvement in the peace process. But he does not have a strong popular constituency. He has also been linked to corruption charges and is known to have close ties with Israeli businesses. Even his popularity inside Fatah has been on the decline: he lost his spot in the movement's Central Committee following internal elections in August.
Candidate: Ismail Haniyeh
Age: 46 years old
Chances: low
The political leader of Hamas became prime minister after his party's 2006 electoral victory over Fatah. President Mahmoud Abbas dismissed him in June 2007 as a result of international refusal to work with a Hamas-led Palestinian government, but Haniyeh rejected the decree and set up his own rival government, which he claims is the legitimate Palestinian Authority, in the Gaza Strip. Long considered one of Hamas's more moderate leaders, Haniyah has indicated willingness to accept a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders and to offer Israel a long-term hudna, or truce, if Israel recognized Palestinian national rights (including a right of return for Palestinian refugees that Israel says is a dealbreaker). A Haniyah presidential bid would likely enjoy widespread support in Gaza, but it would face resistance in the West Bank. Israel and the West would most likely refuse to work with any Hamas president—regardless of whether he was democratically elected or not—because they consider Hamas a terrorist group that continues publicly to doubt Israel's right to exist.
Candidate: Hanan Ashrawi
Age: 63 years old
Chances: moderate
The Palestinian legislator and scholar has captivated international audiences with her activism since the first intifada in 1987. She served as the official Palestinian spokesperson during the peace process between 1991 and 1993. In the Palestinian Authority's first elections in 1996, Ashrawi was elected to the Jerusalem District of the Palestinian Legislative Council and was appointed to run the Ministry of Higher Education and Research. Soon, though, she resigned to protest the culture of corruption in government and Yasir Arafat's handling of the peace process. Today, she is a member of Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad's Third Way party. Ashrawi is a devout Christian and a feminist, which has drawn occasional criticism from Islamist groups like Hamas in the past. But she remains popular in the West Bank—and a favorite among Palestinian academics and civil-society groups. Her presidency would be welcomed by the international community because of her commitment to diplomacy, but Israelis would not take much comfort because of her strong negotiating positions and emphasis on the right of return to Israel for millions of Palestinian refugees.
Candidate: Mustafa Barghouti
Age: 55 years old
Chances: moderate
The Palestinian democracy activist ran for president in the 2005 elections and came in second to Abbas, with close to 20 percent of the vote. In 2002, Barghouti, along with other Palestinian academics and activists, established the Palestinian National Initiative, which they intended it to be a political alternative to the PLO and Islamist groups like Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. Barghouti is an advocate of nonviolent resistance to Israel's occupation, and supports a diplomatic, two-state solution. His support base is considerable in the West Bank but still far from sufficient to propel him to the presidency. Israel and the United States would likely welcome his presidency but would also find him to be a formidable negotiator.
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