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Istanbul landmark seeks return to glory era

71 199x300 Istanbul landmark seeks return to glory era

ISTANBUL – It was the last stop on the Orient Express, a grand hotel with Istanbul’s first electric elevator where artists and aristocrats sipped champagne beneath chandeliers as the Ottoman Empire dissolved and the world drifted toward war.

Mata Hari, accused of spying and executed in France in 1917, stayed at the Pera Palace Hotel. So did Greta Garbo, who played the shadowy dancer in a 1931 movie. Ernest Hemingway checked in to report on war between Turks and Greeks. Agatha Christie is said to have crafted “Murder on the Orient Express” in Room 411.

Then, like the empire it outlived, the hotel slid into decay.

On Sept. 1, the state-owned Pera Palace will reopen after a two-year restoration that cost 23 million euros ($30 million), seeking to capture the lost sparkle of what was one of Istanbul’s most prominent landmarks. It is no longer the lone luxury hotel on a hill above the Golden Horn inlet. The former Ottoman capital teems with high-end accommodation, some in restored imperial mansions along the Bosporus Strait that divides the Asian and European continents.

Pinar Kartal Timer, general manager of the Pera Palace, believes fabled guests of the past will bestow new glory on the hotel, which held its opening ball in 1895.

“These people have left their traces in this hotel,” Timer said in an interview in the 115-room hotel Wednesday. Major structural work and painting was complete, but the old ballroom was empty and the mother-of-pearl bookshelves had not been installed. Workers hammered, and layers of cardboard and plastic covered some balustrades and marble-floored passageways.

The Pera Palace mirrors the revival of the surrounding Beyoglu area, historically known as Pera, which comes from the Greek word for “beyond.” It was nicknamed “Little Europe” in the late 19th century, an enclave of Greek and Armenian entrepreneurs, along with European diplomats and businessmen who imported luxury goods from capitals to the west.

Many local residents fled deadly unrest or moved to outlying areas, leaving neglected stone facades to brood in the narrow, trash-filled streets. In the last decade, shops and restaurants flooded the central neighborhood as economic fortunes and pride in Istanbul’s heritage blossomed.

Mehmet Karaoren is a partner in an architectural firm that snapped up a dozen Pera buildings, restoring them and selling or renting the refitted apartments. In some years, the prices of their properties have doubled.

“In the beginning, this was a game for us. It became a business,” said Karaoren, who sought inspiration for his restorations during travels to Paris, London and New York City.

A commission linked to Turkey’s Culture Ministry bars changes that would taint the historical integrity of a structure, though allowances are made for reinforcement against earthquakes and the installation of elevators in tall buildings with dimly lit, winding staircases.

Business interests and a lack of political will have sometimes trumped the work of conservationists. Istanbul, home to relics and monuments from the Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman empires, is at risk of being placed on a list of endangered cultural treasures by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee. That would be a serious embarrassment since the European Union designated the city as its “cultural capital” this year.

David Michelmore, an international conservationist, said unrestored sections of old Pera were at risk of demolition, and he compared the area to London’s Notting Hill district in the 1960s, a shabby area before its successful rehabilitation.

“It’s not tourists mostly, it’s Turkish people who are going there,” Michelmore said. “Historic centers have a huge capacity for serving purposes of recreation and relaxation.”

The original owner of the Pera Palace was Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits, which operated the Orient Express luxury train line. A Turkish conglomerate, the Besiktas Group, now manages the hotel. It has a modern spa and an indoor pool, as well as new elevators to supplement the original wood and cast iron one.

The building is a mix of styles distinctive to 19th century Istanbul — neo-classical, art nouveau and oriental. Rooms have handwoven carpets and antique furniture mixed with the new. Sixteen are suites named after guests including Britain’s King Edward VIII and Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph I.

Basic room prices start at 185 euros ($240), excluding tax and breakfast, but go higher in peak season. Ahead of the September opening, they are 265 euros ($350).

Nobody will sleep in Room 101. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a former army officer who founded Turkey in 1923, once used it as a base. The room will house a museum of items belonging to Ataturk, including hats, slippers and dignitaries’ gifts.

The hotel hosted spies as well as statesmen. Kim Philby, the British-Soviet double agent, was nearly unmasked in Istanbul, and the agent codenamed Cicero, valet to the British ambassador in Ankara, visited as he sold secret documents to German agents in World War II.

A witness to tumult, the Pera Palace became a target in 1941 when a bomb exploded at the entrance shortly after the arrival of a British diplomatic party from Bulgaria, which had sided with the Nazis. Several people died.

Hemingway drank at the hotel’s Orient Bar in the early 1920s. In his story, “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” the main character, a writer, recalls a brawl over a woman with a British soldier in Istanbul. He slept with the woman that night:

“…and he left her before she was awake looking blousy enough in the first daylight and turned up at the Pera Palace with a black eye, carrying his coat because one sleeve was missing.”


News agency: 4 killed by landmine in Turkey

40 News agency: 4 killed by landmine in Turkey

ANKARA, Turkey – Four civilians died when their vehicle hit a landmine that Kurdish rebels are suspected of planting in southeastern Turkey, the Anatolia news agency reported on Sunday.

The four were heading to an oil-exploration site where the rebels had set a small fire, the state-run agency said, citing local officials it did not identify. Anatolia said the dead included the former head of the local bar association in Batman.

Kurdish rebels fighting for autonomy in Turkey’s southeast, have intensified their attacks since June, saying the government has rejected their calls for a dialogue. Turkey refuses to negotiate with the rebels, who are branded as terrorists by the West. But the Turkish government has introduced a number of reforms, including allowing Kurdish language broadcasts on television, in an attempt to reconcile with the minority Kurds in the hopes of ending the fighting.

The conflict has killed as many as 40,000 people since 1984.


Sanctions-hit Iran defiant but ‘ready’ for nuclear talks

392 Sanctions hit Iran defiant but ready for nuclear talks

TEHRAN (AFP) – Iran vowed on Tuesday to press ahead with its nuclear programme even as it expressed readiness to resume talks on the controversial issue despite being slapped with tough new EU sanctions.

In a move condemned by Russia, the European Union imposed fresh sanctions on Iran’s key energy sector on Monday in a bid to halt its sensitive enrichment of uranium while applying pressure to resume talks on the atomic programme.

Canada followed the European Union’s example with its own sanctions, while the United States, which has led international efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear drive, said the punitive steps would bite.

In an interview with Iran’s English-language Press TV posted on the channel’s website Tuesday, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the Islamic republic would “resume nuclear talks with the West in September.”

But the hardliner said “conditions” he first laid out for talks in June still stand such as the position of world powers on the “Zionist regime’s atomic bombs.”

“They should say whether they consent to it (Israel’s alleged arsenal) or not. That’s all. We don’t expect more,” he said, adding that “others should be present in the discussions”, which Press TV earlier identified as Turkey and Brazil.

Iran’s archfoe Israel, which is the sole if undeclared nuclear power in the Middle East, accuses Tehran of seeking nuclear weapons and has never ruled out a military strike to thwart its perceived drive.

Iran’s Foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said Tehran “deeply regrets and condemns” the new EU sanctions, although they would “not affect Iran’s determination to defend its legitimate right to pursue a peaceful nuclear programme.”

The EU sanctions follow similar measures meted out by the United States that go beyond a fourth set of UN sanctions imposed on June 9 over Iran’s refusal to freeze uranium enrichment.

They are aimed at reviving stalled talks between Iran and six world powers — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States.

Among the EU measures are a ban on the sale of equipment, technology and services to Iran’s energy sector, and steps to hit activities in refining, liquefied natural gas, exploration and production, the bloc’s diplomats said.

New investments in the energy sector have also been banned.

Russia, which has strong economic ties with Iran, said on Tuesday the EU sanctions were “unacceptable” and showed “disregard for the carefully regulated and coordinated provisions of the UN Security Council.”

The comments came despite Moscow having hardened its position on Tehran, with the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev saying Iran was close to having the potential to build a nuclear weapon.

Moscow is also helping Tehran build its first nuclear power station in the southern city of Bushehr in a project that does not fall under the UN sanctions.

The construction of the power plant is on schedule and preparatory work should be completed before September, the head of Russia’s nuclear agency, Sergei Kiriyenko, said on Tuesday, quoted by Russian news agency RIA Novosti.

Iran is the world’s fourth largest producer of crude oil and has the second-largest reserves of natural gas after Russia, but imports 40 percent of its fuel needs because it lacks the refining capacity to meet domestic demand.

The development of its giant gas fields has been delayed due to a lack of investment and difficulties in procuring the required technology.

Several top global energy majors have already quit Iran, or have been considering an exit since the fresh set of UN sanctions.

The country’s banking sector was also hit by restrictions, forcing any transactions of more than 40,000 euros (52,000 dollars) to be authorised by EU governments before they can go ahead.

Ahmadinejad, who has been widely criticised at home over his economic policies, laughed off the unilateral EU and US sanctions.

“I think the policies by the Europeans and the Americans are ridiculous. They think they are going to influence the life of the Iranian society. In fact, they’re imposing sanctions against themselves,” he said in an interview Monday with CBS television.

The last high-level meeting between Iran and the six world powers was held in Geneva in October 2009 when the two sides agreed a nuclear fuel swap deal that has since stalled.

Western powers have demanded Iran suspend its uranium enrichment programme, fearing Tehran would use the material to build a nuclear bomb. Iran says its atomic programme is purely peaceful.


Conditions still apply for nuclear talks: Ahmadinejad

372 196x300 Conditions still apply for nuclear talks: Ahmadinejad

TEHRAN (Reuters) – Iran will resume nuclear negotiations only on certain conditions, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in a TV interview aired on Tuesday after the European Union imposed tough new sanctions.

Ahmadinejad reiterated conditions he first set out in June for returning to talks with major powers about the future of Iran’s nuclear program, which Tehran says is purely peaceful but which the West fears is aimed at developing atom bombs.

Talks could only resume if further countries are involved, if the parties say whether they seek friendship or hostility with Iran and if they express their view on Israel’s alleged nuclear arsenal, Ahmadinejad said, according to a voiceover on the state-run, English-language Press TV channel.

Talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council — the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China — as well as Germany (P5+1), meant to address concerns about Tehran’s uranium enrichment, stalled last October, leading to a toughening of international sanctions.

Iran said in a letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency director on Monday that Tehran was ready to resume talks “without any conditions” on a nuclear fuel swap agreed tentatively with three of the big powers in October.

A diplomat in Vienna, where the IAEA is based, said the statements by Ahmadinejad and Soltanieh were not contradictory.

NO TALKS LIKELY BEFORE SEPTEMBER

Ahmadinejad’s conditions appeared to apply to any resumption of wider-scale talks with the P5+1 on Iran’s nuclear program.

The narrower fuel swap talks — held with the “Vienna Group” of Russia, France, the United States and the IAEA — would be unlikely to restart until September, diplomats said. Iran backed out of the October deal after calling for major amendments.

EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton, who has corresponded with Iran on behalf of the six world powers, has welcomed Iran’s offer to return to negotiations, but has not publicly addressed the conditions set out by Ahmadinejad.

Western diplomats have said his attempt to link talks about Iran’s nuclear program to statements about Israel, Tehran’s arch-enemy, would be particularly problematic.

Ahmadinejad repeated his conditions after the European Union agreed a new round of sanctions, including a block on oil and gas investment [ID:nLDE66P10R] in Iran, following a similar move by Washington and a fourth round of milder U.N. sanctions.

“The logic that they can persuade us to negotiate through sanctions is just a failure,” Ahmadinejad said in the interview.

Russia, which backed the new U.N. sanctions, criticized the additional U.S. and EU measures, saying they undermined efforts to seek a negotiated way out of the nuclear impasse.

Iran, the world’s fifth-largest oil producer, says its nuclear program is wholly peaceful but that has not assuaged fears in many countries that, given Iran’s restrictions on IAEA inspections, its uranium enrichment activity is ultimately intended to yield nuclear weapons.

A diplomat with knowledge of the fuel swap initiative said Iran’s letter to the IAEA ignored issues the three powers — the United States, Russia and France have raised since October, but discussions would continue concerning possible next steps.

Western diplomats say the swap proposal, under which Iran would send some of its low-enriched uranium — potential nuclear bomb material — abroad in exchange for higher enriched fuel for a Tehran medical reactor, is no longer sufficient since Iran’s refined uranium stockpile had doubled in size since October.

The issues raised by Washington, Moscow and Paris include Iran’s decision in February to escalate enrichment to a higher level of purity than that required for civilian energy.


High security for Israeli athletes in Turkey

610 High security for Israeli athletes in Turkey

ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey defeated Israel 3-0 in a women’s volleyball game Sunday that was guarded by hundreds of police because of concerns that pro-Palestinian demonstrators would try to disrupt the event.

The game in the Turkish capital of Ankara was closed to the public, and the 7,000-seat sports hall was mostly empty save for clusters of officials, police and athletes who were allowed to attend. The two teams were playing for the bronze in the European Volleyball League finals.

A small group of protesters gathered at a police barrier two blocks away to voice anger over Israel’s May 31 raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla that killed nine activists on a Turkish ship.

Qualification games between Israel and Turkey in the volleyball tournament were canceled in June amid tension over the raid.

Turkey has threatened to cut diplomatic relations unless it gets an apology or an international investigation of the flotilla incident; Israel has refused to apologize and is conducting its own inquiry.


Turks protest Israeli volleyball team

414 Turks protest Israeli volleyball team

ANKARA, Turkey – Dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters scuffled with police Saturday near a hall where an Israeli volleyball team played in a game closed to the public because of security concerns.

A relatively tolerant approach to the protests by authorities reflected Turkey’s efforts to calibrate public outrage over the May 31 deaths of nine activists aboard a Turkish ship in an aid flotilla bound for Gaza — even as it maintains ties with Israel, which has been a chief supplier of military aid.

“Don’t be dogs of Zionism. God will hold you to account,” some demonstrators snarled at police in helmets who pushed them back with shields of reinforced plastic. “Esteemed friends,” appealed a police commander with a loudspeaker. “Please don’t cause trouble.”

Turkey has threatened to cut diplomatic relations unless it gets an apology or an international investigation of the flotilla incident; Israel has refused to apologize and is conducting its own inquiry.

In the meantime, trade and other civilian contacts continue in a sign that both nations are unwilling for now to abandon a strained partnership between two key allies of the West.

The government imposed heavy security on the game, a 0-3 loss for Israel to Serbia in a European Volleyball League women’s match, dispatching police to block roads around the venue. Israeli security officials in suits guarded the women, and the Israeli players rode in a bus with tinted windows to the indoor stadium, which was mostly empty save for trainers, staff and their relatives.

Only a few flags were visible in the stands, and they were Israeli. After a while, the supporters folded them neatly and tucked them away.

Police thwarted activists who sent email messages that urged supporters to attend the game in order to protest against Israel, advising them to arrive one by one, hiding Palestinian flags and banners, and then shouting slogans upon entering the hall. One message named the hotel housing the Israeli athletes, who were scheduled to play Turkey for third place on Sunday.

Instead, protesters gathered two blocks from the stadium, some bearing posters with the image of 19-year-old Furkan Dogan, the youngest of the activists killed in the raid by Israeli naval commandos on the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish ship.

“Why kill and come here to play?” said protester Hanif Sinan, a landscape architect.

Israeli authorities have said their forces were attacked upon boarding the ship, and acted in self-defense. An Israeli military report this month praised the commandos, but cited flaws in intelligence-gathering and planning, with security officials underestimating the potential for violence.

Hakan Albayrak, a columnist for Turkey’s Yeni Safak newspaper who was a passenger on the Mavi Marmara during the raid, said it was a pity that more people had not attended the volleyball protest. About 100 milled around, some rapping police shields with the poles of their Palestinian flags and lobbing water bottles at security forces.

“These players are guests of our government,” Albayrak said. “We cannot harm any Israeli in our country, but we have the right to protest.”

The Israeli coach, Arie Selinger, coached the U.S. women’s volleyball team to a silver medal in the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, and the Dutch men’s team to silver at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. He said the loss Saturday was a “good experience” for his team.

Then he thanked Turkish authorities, alluding with the hint of a smile to the tight security measures.

“We know that we caused a lot of trouble,” he said.


Report: Kurdish rebels kill 6 Turkish soldiers

183 Report: Kurdish rebels kill 6 Turkish soldiers

ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey’s state-run news agency says Kurdish rebels have killed six Turkish soldiers in a raid on a military outpost in the country’s southeast.

The Anatolia news agency says Tuesday that the overnight attack also left some soldiers wounded at the remote outpost near the Iraqi border and close to the town of Cukurca in Hakkari province. The report says the troops, reinforced with helicopter gunships, have launched a counter offensive and that clashes are still under way.

Kurdish rebels, fighting for autonomy in Turkey’s southeast, have dramatically stepped up their attacks since June, saying the government has rejected their calls for talks.


Egypt: Basis to move to direct peace talks lacking

95 Egypt: Basis to move to direct peace talks lacking

CAIRO – Pressure intensified on Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to agree to direct talks with Israel as Egypt held separate back-to-back meetings with the two sides Sunday in search of a compromise.

Abbas says he won’t negotiate directly with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unless Israel agrees to recognize its 1967 frontier as a basis for the borders of a future Palestinian state and accepts the deployment of an international force to guard them. Netanyahu has refused to be pinned down on a framework for negotiations.

In an effort to sound out the prospects for a move to direct talks, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak met with Abbas, Netanyahu and U.S. Mideast envoy George Mitchell separately Sunday in Cairo.

Egypt has friendly ties with both Israel and Abbas’ Palestinian Authority, and Cairo — like Washington — is pushing to narrow the divide between the two sides and coax them back to the negotiating table.

None of the leaders — nor the U.S. envoy — spoke after the meetings, but Egypt’s foreign minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, told reporters there is still work to be done to get the Palestinians to move to direct talks.

“There must be a strong Israeli strategic move that would deepen Palestinian trust in Israel’s intentions, so we can move from indirect to direct talks,” Aboul Gheit said. “Egypt thinks there is the need for direct talks, that they are the road to reach a settlement … but to have these direct talks, the atmosphere must be ripe and enough progress made.”

Cairo called for a more hands-on U.S. role with the two sides to lay the groundwork for direct negotiations. Aboul Gheit said this could include at least a general framework from Washington for the final settlement.

Egypt’s top diplomat also said there is still more discussion and diplomacy in an effort to narrow the divide and build trust between the two sides.

“We are still hopeful that we can bridge that gap, the gap between the needs of security for Israel and the borders for the Palestinians,” Aboul Gheit said. “You have to create the basis to proceed from indirect to direct talks. That is still lacking. We need to help the Americans and both parties to come closer to each other.”

He said Mubarak received a message Sunday from President Barack Obama and a telephone call from U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging a swift move to direct peace talks.

Aboul Gheit said he hoped that by September there would be enough progress to allow the Palestinians and Israel sit at the same negotiating table, if not sooner.

The four months set aside for Mitchell’s shuttle diplomacy and Israel’s partial curb on settlement construction will have come to an end by September.

Israeli defense officials have said that Israel is considering expanding the role of Palestinian security forces in West Bank towns and removing additional checkpoints that hinder the movement of people and goods. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because no final decision had been made.

When asked about these steps and whether they constitute trust-building, Aboul Gheit said they “address certain problems.”

“But I think we have to focus on (freezing) settlement activity, a timeframe and the 1967 lines,” he said, referring to the borders prior to the 1967 Mideast war.

Abbas is unlikely to enter direct talks without explicit backing from Arab states, whose support he received before engaging in indirect negotiations. Arab foreign ministers are to discuss the fate of those talks later this month.

Netanyahu, who met earlier Sunday with Mitchell in Jerusalem, told Israel’s Cabinet that he would discuss with Mubarak ways to resume direct talks with the Palestinians. The two leaders’ meeting in Cairo lasted nearly two hours.

Netanyahu will also meet late Sunday with EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton upon his return to Jerusalem.

Earlier in the day, Ashton visited the blockaded Gaza Strip to gauge the impact of Israel’s easing of its embargo on the Hamas-ruled territory.

She called on the Israel to go beyond easing its embargo and throw open Gaza’s borders.

“We want to see the opportunity for people to be able to move around freely, to see goods not only coming in to Gaza but exports coming out of Gaza,” Ashton said.

In Jerusalem, Ashton said she discussed the Gaza situation with Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman before meeting Netanyahu. She said the blockade must be lifted, while recognizing that “the security of Israel is extremely important and must be assured.”

Israel continues to ban virtually all exports from Gaza and restricts the import of badly needed construction supplies and raw materials for industry. And along with Egypt, it prevents most Gazans from traveling.

Israel, citing security concerns, has signaled that it is not willing to completely open border crossings.


Iran blames West, Israel for bombings despite condemnation

104 Iran blames West, Israel for bombings despite condemnation

TEHRAN (AFP) – Iran blamed the West and Israel on Saturday for twin suicide bombings which killed at least 27 people, despite condemnation of the attack by the European Union, United Nations and United States.

Police meanwhile said security forces killed six “criminals” on Friday in Sistan-Baluchestan province where the bombings occurred and arrested 40 people for “creating disturbances” in the provincial capital of Zahedan.

“This blind terrorist act was carried out by the mercenaries of the world arrogance (the Western powers),” state television’s website quoted Deputy Interior Minister Ali Abdollahi as saying about Thursday night’s bombings.

“The agents of this crime were trained and equipped beyond our borders and then came into Iran,” Abdollahi said.

Influential lawmaker Alaeddin Borujerdi went a step further and pointed the finger at Pakistan’s intelligence services which he said “have ties with the terrorists,” Fars news agency quoted him as saying.

“The terrorists enter Iran from neighbouring countries and Pakistan, and so the Pakistani government and its army intelligence must revise their ties with them and do something to confront these criminals.”

Sunni militant group Jundallah claimed responsibility for the bombings which targeted members of the elite Revolutionary Guards at a Shiite mosque in Zahedan.

It said the attacks were to avenge the execution of their leader Abdolmalek Rigi on June 20.

Jundallah claims it is fighting for the rights of Baluchis who make up a significant proportion of the population of Sistan-Baluchestan province and who, unlike Iran’s Shiite majority, mainly follow the Sunni branch of Islam.

The province borders Afghanistan and Pakistan and analysts says Jundallah has exploited the unrest in the region to find safe haven on the frontier.

Parliament speaker Ali Larijani directly accused the United States for the bombings.

“Today, the country is mourning the tragic explosion in Zahedan which was done with the backing of Americans. Americans can’t come up with any excuse since they are connected with the Rigi group,” he said, quoted on the website.

Crowds of mourners gathered outside Zahedan’s Jamia mosque, where the bombers struck, to take part in a mass funeral for the victims of the attacks.

“Those who committed these terrorist acts are neither Shiite nor Sunni,” read one banner carried by the mourners, while crowds chanted: “Death to terrorists,” the official IRNA news agency reported.

Six “criminals” were killed on Friday in three different incidents which occurred in the border areas of Sistan-Baluchestan, Iran’s deputy police chief Ahmad Reza Radan told ISNA news agency.

He said clashes broke out as security forces blocked various roads in the province but he did not specify if the six were connected to Thursday’s bombings.

The deputy police chief also said that police had arrested 40 people in Zahedan for “creating disturbances” in the city after the bombings.

Tehran has long charged that Washington has provided support to the Rigi group as part of efforts to destabilise the Islamic regime by fomenting unrest among ethnic minorities in sensitive border areas.

US President Barack Obama condemned the “outrageous terrorist attacks,” while UN chief Ban Ki-moon blasted a “senseless act of terrorism” and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said they were “cowardly” attacks.

Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar pointed the finger at Israel, Iran’s arch-foe.

“The terrorist act by the Zionists had a number of objectives, including creating division between Shiites and Sunnis,” the ISNA news agency quoted Najjar as saying.

He said Iran’s security and intelligence services now had “a grip on the situation.”

But MP Abbas Ali Noora from Sistan-Baluchestan resigned in protest at the handling of security in the province, saying such an attack was expected after the execution of Rigi.

“The culture of this region is of revenge. After Rigi’s execution, we had warned that this group would retaliate,” he told ILNA news agency.


EU top diplomat visits Gaza to press for open borders

85 189x300 EU top diplomat visits Gaza to press for open borders

GAZA CITY (AFP) – The European Union’s top diplomat Catherine Ashton visited Gaza on Sunday to press for the further lifting of Israel’s blockade on the Hamas-ruled territory.

On her second trip to the impoverished Palestinian enclave in four months, Ashton was due to assess the partial lifting of the four-year closures in the wake of a deadly May 31 raid on a Gaza aid fleet.

“We’ve made it clear that we want to see the potential for the people of Gaza to live an ordinary life,” Ashton told reporters in the West Bank town of Ramallah before her visit.

“There needs to be an opening of the crossings for both people and goods to flow in both directions.”

She said the European Union was willing to send monitors to help operate the crossings, but they would have to have a clear role and work with the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, which Hamas drove out of Gaza in 2007.

“At the moment that is not something that is on the table,” she said.

Israel said it would begin allowing everything into Gaza except for weapons and dual-use goods during the international uproar that followed the bloody seizure of the flotilla and the killing of nine Turkish activists.

It said it would allow building materials into the territory but only for internationally supervised projects and that its naval blockade would remain in place to keep the Islamist Hamas movement from importing military-grade rockets and other weapons.

The European Union welcomed the changes but has pressed Israel to allow for freer travel and the export of goods manufactured in Gaza, where the near-collapse of the private sector has spawned 40 percent unemployment.

“What we have today is 75 percent less (volume of traffic) than what we had in the first half of 2007… That’s not what we are looking for,” Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad said on Saturday.

“The economy of Gaza cannot be sustained only by importation. There needs to be exports,” Fayyad told a joint press conference with Ashton.

Ashton was to press those concerns during her three-day Middle East trip, which includes meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, visiting US envoy George Mitchell and other officials.

She had no plans to meet anyone from Hamas, which is blacklisted as a terrorist group by the West because of its refusal to recognise Israel and its commitment to armed struggle.

In Gaza, Ashton will visit a summer camp and a school run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA).

She will also visit local businesses co-financed by the EU through its private sector reconstruction programme in Gaza.

The British baroness was named last year as the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, a new position that was created to give the 27-nation bloc a single voice on the world stage.

The visit came as Mitchell held the sixth round of indirect peace talks between Israel and the West Bank Palestinian leadership in a bid to relaunch direct talks suspended after the Gaza war erupted in December 2008.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has thus far rejected US and Israeli demands for direct talks, insisting that the two sides first make progress on the thorny issues of final borders and security.

Israel first imposed the closures on Gaza in June 2006 after Hamas and other militants captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in a deadly cross-border raid. The 23-year-old is still being held at a secret location.

The sanctions were tightened a year later when Hamas seized power after driving Abbas’s forces out in a week of fierce street clashes.


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