Israeli media speculates over possible Netanyahu-Abbas meeting hosted by Putin in Moscow
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                  Israeli media speculates over possible Netanyahu-Abbas meeting hosted by Putin in Moscow

                  Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas exchange a rare handshake at the Climate Summit in Paris in November 2015.

                  Israeli media speculates over possible Netanyahu-Abbas meeting hosted by Putin in Moscow

                  30.08.2016, Israel and the World

                  Media reports in Israel speculate about the possibility of a meeting between Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas in Moscow in October.

                  Preliminary contacts have been made regarding this possible meeting.

                  Daily Israel Hayom quotes an anonymous senior Israeli official, saying “ongoing, preliminary communications” are taking place. Meanwhile, Ynet news quotes a similar figure saying that it is “too early to tell” whether such a meeting will take place.

                  A Kremlin official said that there was “nothing concrete” about a meeting yet.

                  Last week, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi publicly stated that Russia’s President Vladimir Putin had offered to host talks between Netanyahu and Abbas. In May, al-Sisi made a surprising public plea for Israel and the Palestinians to renew peace talks in the context of brokering a wider regional peace.

                  Netanyahu endorsed al-Sisi’s initiative and has repeatedly insisted that he is prepared to meet Abbas anytime, anywhere, without preconditions.

                  But Abbas has not given his support to al-Sisi’s initiative and is thought to favour a French plan to convene an international peace conference before the end of the year.

                  The process, which has yet to include Israeli or Palestinian representatives, is opposed by Israel as a way for the Palestinians to avoid bilateral talks.

                  It is thought that a Russian-hosted meeting could present a fresh option. However, media reports suggest that Abbas already set conditions for a meeting in Moscow to take place. They include a freeze on Israeli construction in the West Bank and Jerusalem, plus the release of a number of Palestinian prisoners. Israel is highly unlikely to agree to such terms and insists that preconditions are unnecessary.

                  On Monday, Mahmoud Abbas's office said that the PA is ready to participate in any peace initiative aimed at a "comprehensive and fair solution".

                  "We are ready to participate in any regional or international initiative with the objective of a comprehensive and fair solution," Abbas’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeina, said in a statement quoted by the AFP news agency.

                  In July, it was reported that Egypt itself was seeking to host a trilateral meeting in Cairo.

                  Netanyahu reportedly told Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry — on a rare visit to Jerusalem in July— he would be willing to meet with Abbas in Cairo for talks hosted by Sissi. The Prime Minister’s Office did not deny the report by the Saudi-owned, pan-Arab news outlet Al-Arabiya.

                  It said in a statement that “whether the issue was discussed or not, Israel has always said it is prepared to conduct direct bilateral negotiations with no preconditions.”

                  EJP