Sunday,
September 07, 2008
7 Elul, 5768
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
Year 2006 in Review
US 2008 ELECTION
Iran - Holocaust
Voices
Culture
In Depth
Mideast Crisis
World Cup
On Anglo Jewry
Week at a glance
France Election
EU and Annapolis Summit
News from outside of Europe
Holocaust Remembrance Day
July 2008 at a glance
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
advertisement
Charles Bronfman Prize 2009

Tony Blair announces huge jobs plan to bolster Middle East peace talks
Updated: 19/Nov/2007 12:56
In his first major initiative since becoming the international community's Middle East envoy in June, Blair will outline plans including industrial parks and agricultural ventures in the West Bank and Hamas-ruled Gaza.
Page tools
Email to friend
Print this page
Bookmark this page
Add your view

LONDON (EJP)---The Mideast Quartet’s representative, Tony Blair, will announce on Monday an array of new economic projects aimed at generating jobs for tens of thousands of Palestinians, revitalizing the occupied territories and creating momentum for the peace talks due to start next week, the “Guardian” newspaper reported.

In his first major initiative since becoming the international community’s Middle East envoy in June, Blair will outline plans including industrial parks and agricultural ventures in the West Bank and Hamas-ruled Gaza.

The announcement will be made jointly with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and Israel’s Defence Minister, Ehud Barak, in what is hoped will be a new spirit of cooperation.

The aim is to improve the atmosphere in the run-up to the US-sponsored Mideast talks in Annapolis, Maryland, the first major Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations for seven years.

Blair said that the projects would ultimately employ tens of thousands of Palestinians and were "also designed to give some sense things could change on the ground".

The projects are expected to include a trade park in the West Bank town of Jericho linked to the Jordanian border by a trade corridor, potentially bypassing Israeli checkpoints which make doing business in the occupied territories close to impossible.

A new sewerage system in Gaza is also planned, although it is unclear how it would be built without the cooperation of the Islamic militant group Hamas, which staged a military takeover in June.

 


Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Latest Articles
Three young Jews attacked in Paris on their way to synagogue
US election: Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel waits for debates to make his choice
US group denounces call by evangelical alliance for conversion of European Jews
Qatar Emir gives Hamas leader letter from Noam Shalit to his son
Swastikas, racist and anti-Semitic tags on French college walls
Lithuanian, Israeli experts at odds over pre-war Jewish cemetery
Sarkozy to give Assad letter from Noam Shalit to his son Gilad