
"RICE COMES RICE GOES"
Many Palestinians also voice skepticism, arguing the three architects of any deal -- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and U.S. President George W. Bush -- lack political muscle."Rice comes, Rice goes, nothing happens," said Ashraf Methqal, a pharmacist in the West Bank city of Ramallah.Abbas and Olmert hope to present a joint document at the conference that will address key issues like borders and the future of Jerusalem and Palestinian refugees. The document is expected to serve as a basis for formal statehood negotiations that would be launched following the gathering.Some Palestinians doubt Israel's commitment to peace given continued violence in the West Bank. Hundreds of Palestinians marched through the flashpoint city of Nablus shouting "revenge" and firing rifles in the air after Israeli troops killed two men during a raid last week.Many are more concerned about factional infighting four months after Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip, prompting Abbas's Fatah group to cement its hold on the West Bank."A state? It is farther than a dream now," said Mohammed Yaccoub, an unemployed Gazan. "Going to the conference as divided as we are today has one meaning: surrender."One young Palestinian woman in Nablus was hopeful her people would secure independence. "I think we will get a state," said 23-year-old Rasha Sarrawi.But even if Israel's leaders agree to an independent Palestine, the Jewish settlers who believe they have a divine right to the West Bank and have built homes there in contravention of international law won't go without a fight."If you are a believing Jew then you believe all the land of Israel belongs to you," said Sharon Katz atop a West Bank hill she climbed as part of a protest by right-wing activists. "I don't think I could compromise on the land of Israel."
As in the days of Noah...