Alexandria - Egypt's President Hosny Mubarak and Israel's
Defence Minister met in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria on
Tuesday for further talks.
The talks focused on the release of the captured Israeli soldier
Gilad Shalit, kidnapped by Hamas-linked militants in a cross-border
raid June 2006, the situation in the Gaza Strip and peace talks
between Israel and the Palestinians.
Cairo has been leading negotiations for Shalit's release. Egypt's
Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit told journalists that Barak had
told Mubarak that the issue was very important to Israel, which
regards Egypt as a central partner in efforts to return Schalit.
Palestinians from the radical Islamic Hamas group have refused to
release the soldier unless hundreds of Palestinian prisoners,
including several who were implicated in deadly attacks on Israelis,
are released. Israel has so far refused.
Barak had also thanked Mubarak for his efforts to curb weapons
smuggling into the Gaza Strip, Abul Gheit said.
Mubarak meanwhile asked the Israeli minister to improve the
humanitarian conditions of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, especially
as the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan approaches.
Israel imposed a blockade on the enclave after Hamas seized
control from the Palestinian Fatah group last June.
The nearly 2 million Gazans currently live amid a crippling
shortage of basic supplies and services.
Egypt has stepped up its fight against smuggling into Gaza via
tunnels along its border with Israel. More than 200 of the tunnels
which are used to smuggle weapon and food have reportedly been
discovered in the area this year.
The United States and Israel have been accusing Egypt of being
reluctant to curb the smuggling of weapons into Gaza. A team of US
specialists were brought to Egypt after the government appealed to
the US for assistance in locating the tunnels.
Egypt was on Tuesday also hosting inter-Palestinian talks in a bid
to help various Palestinian groups and factions settle their
differences.
'Egypt has shown a genuine will to bridge the internal Palestinian
gap,' Mohamad al-Hindi, senior leader of the Palestinain Islamic
Jihad group, which is taking part in the Cairo talks, told Deutsche
Presse-Agentur dpa.
Al-Hindi told dpa: 'Greater efforts are however needed to
reconcile the splits, especially between Fatah and Hamas.'
Egyptian officials are holding separate bilateral talks with
representatives of the Palestinain Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and the Democratic Front for
the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP).
An all-inclusive meeting that would include officials from Fatah
and Hamas is expected to be held in Cairo on Wednesday.
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