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Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon delivered a new blow to the troubled Middle East peace process Sunday by deciding to put on hold an agreement to release 400 Palestinian prisoners. Palestinians reacted furiously to the move, saying it would only serve to undermine an ongoing truce, while Egypt also warned that it was likely to weaken the moderate Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas. The 400 prisoners were due to have been released by Israel as part of an agreement reached with Abbas at a summit in the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh three months ago.
Five hundred low-level prisoners were released in the immediate aftermath but relations have since soured.
A spokesman in Sharon's office said all other prisoners would remain behind bars until the Palestinians cracked down on militant groups such as the Islamist movement Hamas.
"The prime minister has decided not to release the detainees for the moment as Abu Mazen (Abbas) has not taken any action to decapitate the terrorism which is continuing," he said.
"When the Palestinians start to respect the commitments they made at Sharm el-Sheikh we'll do something, but not before."
Sharon was heavily criticised two years ago when his failure to release more than several hundred Palestinian prisoners was seen as having undermined Abbas's tenure as prime minister, leading to his resignation.
The Israeli leader however told a meeting of his cabinet Sunday that he was not prepared to bolster Abbas at the expense of security.
"Everyone is asking me to strengthen Abu Mazen, but I say to them not for the price of Israeli citizens lives," Sharon said.
"I would be very pleased if conditions would be created for the transfer of Palestinian towns to their security control, but the Palestinians are not fulfilling their obligations."
His government decided last week to freeze the transfer of security responsibility in parts of the West Bank for similar reasons.
As part of the agreements reached at Sharm el-Sheikh, responsibility for security was meant to be transferred from the Israeli army to the Palestinian Authority in five West Bank towns.
The transfer has happened so far in only two towns - Jericho and Tulkaram - with Israel claiming the Palestinians failed to keep their side of the deal by disarming militants who had been on the military's wanted list.
Abbas is reluctant to implement a general crackdown for fear of sparking civil war and strengthening Hamas ahead of July's legislative elections. He has managed to persuade the armed factions to call a cease-fire but Israel says Abbas's security forces are not preventing truce violations.
The Palestinians said the decision to freeze the releases after suspending the security transfers was another illustration of Israel's desire to wreck the progress made at the February summit.
"This decision is part of the Israeli obstacles to the implementation of the Sharm el-Sheikh understandings and will have a negative impact on the cooldown," prisoner affairs minister Sufian Abu Zaydeh told AFP, in reference to the truce.
Abu Zaydeh and Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni took part in a ministerial meeting on the prisoners later Sunday but failed to make any progress, the two sides said.
The Palestinians insisted on the immediate release of hundreds of prisoners held in detention without trial under military orders for renewable periods of six months. The Israelis linked any further releases to a halt in violence.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2005

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