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20 years on, historic Oslo accords seen as false dawn

Accords fail to live up to original expectations

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Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, left, shakes hands with Palestinian Liberation Organization Chairman YasserArafat accompanied by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (centre) US President Bill Clinton on September 13, 1993. Photo: AFP

Twenty years after the historic Oslo accords, seen then as the cornerstone of an imminent peace settlement, Israelis and Palestinians had to be dragged back to the negotiating table following conflicts and political deadlock.

With Palestinian officials admitting the latest US-brokered talks are “doomed to failure” and Israel stepping up settlement construction, analysts see outside pressure as the only way to reach an agreement.

Twenty years after the historic Oslo accords, seen then as the cornerstone of an imminent peace settlement, Israelis and Palestinians had to be dragged back to the negotiating table following conflicts and political deadlock

“Both sides will have to... restrain the extremists. The enemies of peace are within both camps,” Yossi Beilin, a mastermind of the Oslo accords, wrote in Israel’s Haaretz newspaper.

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Pro-settlement ministers in Israel’s ruling coalition, including Housing Minister Uri Ariel, oppose any withdrawal from occupied Palestinian territory and even the creation of a state for the Palestinians.

Success in the talks is “so dependent on the players,” agreed Palestinian negotiator Nabil Shaath, speaking to journalists this week.

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“I thought when Oslo started that it had a strong opportunity for success.

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