Prague(dpa) - The European Union sees a ceasefire in the Middle
East on the horizon, an EU official said after the bloc's
unsuccessful mission returned late Tuesday to Prague.
'We are suspecting a dawn, but it is not here yet,' said Czech
Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg, whose country chairs the EU
until June 30.
The EU mission achieved little. Israel rejected the EU's call for
an immediate ceasefire or at least a lull in fighting that would ease
distribution of humanitarian aid in the embattled Gaza Strip.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said after meeting EU officials
on Tuesday that the Gaza offensive will continue as long as Hamas
fires rockets at Israel and smuggles weapons into the territory from
Egypt.
The Czech-led delegation, which included Czech Foreign Minister
Karel Schwarzenberg, EU Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner and the
top EU diplomat Javier Solana, met with Egyptian, Israeli,
Palestinian and Jordanian leaders in the fruitless bid to end
fighting.
'It was perfectly clear that during our visit we can't achieve an
immediate ceasefire,' Schwarzenberg said.
The mission, whose members included the French and Swedish foreign
ministers, Bernard Kouchner and Carl Bildt, was eclipsed by French
President Nicolas Sarkozy's separate trip to the region.
Solana joined Sarkozy's delegation on Tuesday for talks in Syria
and Egypt, Schwarzenberg said. He is also to travel with the French
president to Israel.
'I hope for a successful result,' Schwarzenberg said.
In a minor achievement, the EU managed to persuade Israel to allow
one European Commission official to coordinate humanitarian aid for
Gaza, EU Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said.
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