News Peace talks limp along in climate of low expectations Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | January 19, 2001 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. JERUSALEM — For all their differences, Israeli and Palestinian officials are agreeing on one thing — that it is unlikely they will achieve any breakthroughs before Israeli elections are held next month. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Ehud Barak's spokesman all but ruled out the possibility of an Israeli-Palestinian peace accord before Israel holds elections for prime minister on Feb. 6. Palestinian officials were soon echoing this assessment. Barak's chances of victory in the election are widely considered minimal without such an agreement. In one small sign of progress, Israel on Wednesday eased the closure it imposed on the Gaza Strip. The decision to relax the closure — which was imposed after the body of a murdered Jewish settler was found earlier this week — came after Israeli and Palestinian officials held talks on security cooperation Tuesday night. Separate high-level peace negotiations held Tuesday remained deadlocked over such issues as the future of Jerusalem and millions of Palestinian refugees. Israeli Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami and Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat met on Wednesday in Cairo with Egyptian Foreign Minister Amre Moussa. The meeting was announced after the Palestinian leadership blamed "collaborators" for the death of prominent Palestinian TV broadcaster Hisham Miki in Gaza. Miki was gunned down in a hotel restaurant earlier on Wednesday by masked gunmen. The Israel Defense Force, in a statement, denied that Israeli security was involved in the shooting. The talks followed a meeting between Ben-Ami and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, according to officials. No breakthroughs in peace talks were reported, but Israeli sources said that Mubarak had suggested the meeting because Arafat was scheduled to arrive in Cairo for his own talks with the Egyptian leader. As of press time, more talks were slated for this week, but with the two sides saying that a full agreement is out of reach, it is not clear what goals they are setting for themselves. Palestinian negotiators have ruled out a partial accord or an outline of principles for further talks. Peace efforts had suffered a setback Monday when Israel canceled a negotiating session following the murder of Roni Tsalah, a 33-year-old resident of the Gush Katif settlement of Kfar Yam in southern Gaza. Tsalah's body was discovered in an orange grove near the settlement's greenhouses early Monday morning. An Israeli army commander said Tsalah was shot in the head, apparently with his own gun. His burned-out car was found in the Palestinian city of Khan Yunis. A group affiliated with Arafat's Fatah movement took responsibility for the killing. To avenge Tsalah's slaying, Jewish settlers set fire to Palestinian homes, fields and greenhouses. According to friends, Tsalah was one of the last settlers who had continued to work with local Palestinians. Barak called last weekend's murder an "abominable crime" that dealt a "difficult blow to the peace process." President Moshe Katsav said the incident proved the Palestinians are not serious in their efforts to attain peace with Israel. Israel and the Palestinian Authority launched high-level talks beginning Jan. 11 to try to narrow the gaps in their positions toward proposals Clinton recently made for a peace accord. The talks included a meeting Saturday night between Israeli Cabinet member Shimon Peres, an architect of the 1993 Oslo accords, and Arafat. Generating the most heat are proposals under which Israel would cede most control of Jerusalem's Temple Mount in exchange for Palestinian flexibility on their demand that millions of Palestinian refugees be allowed to return to Israel. Political sources in Jerusalem were quoted as saying the latest contacts were aimed primarily at preventing an escalation of violence and ensuring that dialogue continues after President Clinton's term ends. In another development, the Palestinian Authority executed two men over the weekend for allegedly helping Israel target senior Palestinian militants involved in attacks against Israelis. The executions, by firing squad, prompted an international outcry. Human rights groups in Israel and Palestinian Authority territory denounced the executions. Palestinian officials defended them, saying they were a necessary measure in a situation of war. Following the outcry, Palestinian Justice Minister Freih Abu Medein announced that the Palestinian Authority was offering amnesty to those Palestinians who turn themselves in within 45 days and make a full disclosure of their links with Israel. On Tuesday, he said seven Palestinians had turned themselves in under the amnesty program. Hamas, meanwhile, threatened to strike with an "iron fist" at Palestinians suspected of assisting Israel. J. Correspondent Also On J. News Barak: Time to look at unilateral move News France puts off Israeli-Palestinian peace conference until January News Israeli, Palestinian diplomats meet quietly News Marathon peace talks persist amid snags over Hebron Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes