Israel this week issued a formal rejection of a recent offer by former
US President Jimmy Carter and former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to
mediate a ceasefire between the Jewish state and the Hamas rulers of
the Gaza Strip.
Carter and Annan sent their proposal to Israel several weeks ago, and
noted that South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former Irish
President Mary Robinson would also be part of the mediation team.
Carter, Annan, Tutu and Robinson have for decades been among the
foremost international critics of Israel's right to defend itself
against Arab Muslim terrorism and have regularly lent credibility to
groups like Hamas that openly reject the Jewish state's very right to
exist.
Nevertheless, Israel remained diplomatic in its response to what many
viewed as a duplicitous offer of help by explaining that "at this time
it would not be right to introduce more players into a diplomatic
process that is already in a complex stage."
Original
Source
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Friday, March 28
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on Fri 28 Mar 2008 02:01 AM CDT
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