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Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said on Sunday that Israel was ready to talk with Arab states over their peace plan as he held the first round of planned regular meetings with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.
"We are ready to hold talks with any combination of Arab states on their ideas and I would be glad to hear their ideas on the Saudi initiative," Olmert said at the weekly cabinet meeting. "I'll be glad to hear their ideas and for them to listen to ours," he said. "I hope there will be a chance for such meetings."
He was referring to a blueprint revived during an Arab League summit last month which offers Israel peace and normal ties with Arab countries in exchange for withdrawing from Arab land occupied during the 1967 Six Day War, allowing the creation of a Palestinian state and the return of refugees.
Israel, which initially rejected the plan when it was first unveiled in 2002, has said recently it could provide a basis for talks, provided there are amendments to the refugee issue something the Arab states have refused.
"We are looking for a way to advance the Saudi initiative," Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres said. "Clearly we don't reject the initiative. Both sides can come with their positions and since there are disagreements between the two sides, we have to find a way to bridge them."
The statements came ahead of a meeting of 12 Arab ministers in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss the Saudi-drafted peace initiative.
On Sunday, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was to hold talks with her Jordanian counterpart in Amman in preparation for Wednesday's meeting, a senior official in her ministry said.
Critics have accused Olmert, whose ratings are approaching zero, for being disingenuous in turning to the dormant peace process as an attempt to divert attention from criticism over last year's war against Hezbollah and a string of corruption scandals.
Earlier this month, Arab League chief Amr Mussa rejected Olmert's offer to participate in a meeting of Israelis, Palestinians and "moderate" Arab nations because the Israelis described the return of refugees as a "red line."
"Its only goal was to get normalisation for free," Mussa said of the offer, adding that it "wasn't serious and offered nothing new."
Olmert and Abbas met in Jerusalem on Sunday in the first of what are due to be regular meetings between the two leaders aimed at jumpstarting peace talks, which have been largely stalled for six years.
"We will not touch on core issues, but we will discuss substantial issues such as legislative administration and security bodies in the Palestinian Authority," he said.
Discussions will also touch on drawn-out talks over a possible Palestinian prisoner release in return for an Israeli soldier seized by Gaza militants last June.
"This is a topic which will not be removed from our agenda," Olmert said, referring to the captured Corporal Gilad Shalit. The fate of Shalit, who was seized after militants tunnelled out of Gaza and attacked an Israeli border post on June 25, has been a major stumbling block between Israelis and Palestinians.
Palestinians have demanded that Israel release hundreds of prisoners in exchange for Shalit, but the Olmert government has so far refused to free any detainees "with blood on their hands" those involved in attacks that have killed Israelis.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2007

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