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Written by Haaretz Service Haaretz Service
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Category: News News
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Published: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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Last Updated: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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Created: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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The Palestinian Authority intends to establish a de-facto state within
the next two years, despite failing peace talks, Palestinian Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad said on Tuesday.
"We have decided to be proactive, to expedite the end of the occupation
by working very hard to build positive facts on the ground, consistent
with having our state emerge as a fact that cannot be ignored," Fayyad
told the Times of London. "This is our agenda, and we want to pursue it
doggedly."
According to Fayyad, the idea would be to "end the occupation, despite the occupation."
The de facto state would include security forces, public services and a
thriving economy, Fayyad told the Times, and would hopfully serve as
the impetus to Israel to move foward on its own commitments.
Fayyad was to unveil his plan for building the institutions and
infrastructure of the state of Palestine, which he said could feasibly
be readied in the next two years.
Not so much a blueprint as a wish-list, the 65-page plan calls for a
new international airport in the Jordan Valley and new rail links to
neighboring states, and proposes a generous tax regime for foreign
investors.
The Palestinian Authority which Fayyad heads is dependent on foreign
assistance for most of its budget. A copy of the plan was obtained by
Reuters ahead of publication.
The plan is short on detail, but setting out these objectives is a
departure from Palestinian policy over the past 15 years, which focused
exclusively on negotiations with Israel rather than building
institutions.
Western-backed Fayyad says Palestinians must not wait for a final peace
settlement with Israel but get on with creating their state.
"We call upon all our people to work together on the basis of full
partnership in the process of completing and building the institutions
of a free, democratic and stable state of Palestine," the plan states.
"The world should hear the clear and united position from all walks of
Palestinian society ... that the Israeli occupation is the only
obstacle that hinders the stability, prosperity and the progress of our
people and their right to freedom, independence and a decent life."
Fayyad, a technocrat with no significant political base, heads a newly
aligned cabinet with more ministers than before from the dominant Fatah
faction of President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Islamist Hamas rivals refuse
to recognize the premier.
On the political level, the plan is in harmony with the position of
Abbas, who wants to establish a state on all territories that Israel
occupied after the 1967 war, with Arab East Jerusalem as its capital.
The document says the government will focus on improving the
performance of Palestinian security services, as part of its commitment
to crack down on militants as stipulated in the internationally backed
peace plan or "road map".
It speaks of building infrastructure, securing energy sources and
water, and improving housing, education, and agriculture. But no
detailed prescriptions are included.
"The government will work on encouraging investment in Palestine
through offering tax cuts to local and foreign investors (and) will
review investment regulations and remove obstacles that hinder
investment," says the document.
"Our national duty stipulates that we should do whatever we can to get
our economy out of the cycle of dependency and alienation."