Peres funeral, attended by Obama, briefly
brings Israeli, Palestinian leaders together
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[September 30, 2016]
By Jeffrey Heller and Jeff Mason
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli and
Palestinian leaders shook hands during a brief chat and U.S. President
Barack Obama gently reminded them of the "unfinished business of peace"
at the funeral Friday of Shimon Peres, the last of a generation of
Israel's founding fathers.
But there was no indication that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's
rare visit to Jerusalem and the amiable words he and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exchanged would lead to any movement in
long-stalled peacemaking.
Peres, a former president and prime minister who died on Wednesday at
the age of 93, shared a Nobel Prize for the interim land-for-peace
accords he helped reach with the Palestinians as Israel's foreign
minister in the 1990s.
Long-hailed abroad and by supporters in Israel as a visionary, Peres was
seen by his critics as an overly optimistic dreamer in the harsh
realities of the Middle East.
"I know from my conversations with him, his pursuit of peace was never
naive," Obama said in his eulogy of Peres, who did much in the early
part of his 70 years in public life to build up Israel's powerful
military and nuclear weapons capabilities.
With divisions deep over Jewish settlement in Israeli-occupied territory
that Palestinians seek for a state, as well as other issues,
U.S.-sponsored negotiations on a final agreement between the two sides
have been frozen since 2014.
Netanyahu and Abbas have not held face-to-face talks since 2010. Abbas
opted to attend Peres's funeral, making the short drive from nearby
Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank, through Israeli military
checkpoints.
"Long time, long time," Abbas told Netanyahu and the prime minister's
wife Sara, after shaking his hand before the start of the ceremony held
in the "Great Leaders of the Nation" section of Mount Herzl cemetery,
overlooking a forested valley.
Welcoming Abbas, as participants recorded the encounter on their mobile
phones, Netanyahu said of the Palestinian leader's attendance: "It's
something that I appreciate very much on behalf of our people and on
behalf of us."
In Israel for just a few hours to pay tribute to Peres, Obama said in
the eulogy that Abbas's "presence here is a gesture and a reminder of
the unfinished business of peace". He was the only speaker to
acknowledge Abbas's presence.
In Gaza, ruled by the Islamist group Hamas, hundreds of Palestinians
rallied after Friday prayers condemning the participation of Palestinian
and Arab leaders in the funeral.
FRONT ROW
Abbas was given a front-row seat between European Council President
Donald Tusk and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Obama briefly
greeted the Palestinian leader with a kiss on each cheek before walking
down the line to stand next to Netanyahu.
"Even in the face of terrorist attacks, even after repeated
disappointments at the negotiation table, (Peres) insisted that as human
beings, Palestinians must be seen as equal in dignity to Jews and must
therefore be equal in self-determination," Obama said in his address.
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A still image taken from a video shows Israel's Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Barack Obama attending the
funeral of former Israeli President Shimon Peres in Jerusalem
September 30, 2016. REUTERS/Pool via Reuters TV
U.S. officials have held open the possibility of Obama making
another formal effort to get peace negotiations back on the agenda
before he leaves office in January, possibly via a U.N. Security
Council resolution.
Netanyahu recalled in his eulogy that he had once argued with Peres,
a former leader of the center-left Labour Party, about what was more
important for Israel - peace or security.
"Shimon, you said, 'Bibi: the best security is peace.' And I said,
'without security there can be no peace.'"
"And you know what our surprise conclusion was? We are both right...
The goal is not power. Power is the vehicle. The goal is existence
and co-existence," Netanyahu said.
Peres, who suffered a stroke two weeks ago, was buried in a Jewish
religious ceremony in a plot between two other former prime
ministers, Yitzhak Rabin and Yitzhak Shamir. Rabin was assassinated
by an ultranationalist Israeli in 1995 over the interim peace deals
struck with the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
"Gone too soon," one of Peres's two sons, Yoni, quoted his father as
telling him when asked what he wanted as his epitaph.
Amos Oz, the celebrated Israeli author and peace campaigner who was
a long-time friend of Peres, said in his eulogy it was time to
create a Palestinian state alongside Israel. "We must split this
house into two apartments," Oz said. "Where are the brave and wise
leaders who will continue his legacy?"
The rulers of Egypt and Jordan, the only Arab states to have signed
peace treaties with Israel, in 1979 and 1994, were not in
attendance. But the Egyptian foreign minister came and King Abdullah
of Jordan sent a telegram of condolences.
Britain's Prince Charles, French President Francois Hollande,
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, Polish President Andrzej Duda,
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and former British leaders
David Cameron and Tony Blair also were at the funeral.
(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza; Writing by
Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Luke Baker and Mark Heinrich)
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