[Excerpt: "Israel must pull out of all Palestinian lands occupied in 1967.  
We must end the occupation," Abbas said to a cheering crowd of hundreds of  
supporters in the West Bank city of Ramallah. "We cannot compromise on  
Jerusalem."]
 
_http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wire/ats-ap_top13dec25,0,1431755.stor
y_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wire/ats-ap_top13dec25,0,1431755.story)
 
 
Abbas Echoes Arafat in Campaign Kickoff

5:05 AM PST, December 25,  2004
By RAVI NESSMAN, Associated Press  Writer
 
RAMALLAH, West Bank â Cloaking himself in Yasser Arafat's legacy, interim  
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas pledged Saturday in his first official 
campaign 
 speech to fulfill Palestinian dreams of statehood.
 
Abbas, the front-runner in the upcoming presidential election on Jan. 9,  
called on Israel to end its occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east  
Jerusalem. He said he had chosen the path of peace and negotiations.
 
"Israel must pull out of all Palestinian lands occupied in 1967. We must  end 
the occupation," Abbas said to a cheering crowd of hundreds of supporters in  
the West Bank city of Ramallah. "We cannot compromise on Jerusalem."
 
Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem during the  1967 
Mideast War. Israel and the Palestinians both claim Jerusalem as their  
capital.
 
"We are choosing the path of peace and negotiation," Abbas said. "If there  
is no peace here, there will be no peace in the Middle East or the rest of the  
world."
 
The Abbas campaign rally began with a moment of silence for Arafat, who  died 
in a French hospital on Nov. 11.
 
Abbas has gained legitimacy from his close, albeit rocky, ties to Arafat.  
Abbas has placed Arafat's image on his campaign posters and sprinkled his 
speech 
 with references to the late leader. Abbas visited Bethlehem on Christmas eve 
--  a traditional gesture made by Arafat, until Israel started barring him 
from  attending in 2001.
 
In his speech Saturday, Abbas promised to hold parliamentary elections in  
the first half of 2005, shortly after the January presidential race.
 
Earlier Saturday, Abbas supporters braved the rain and cold to hang large  
banners of Abbas and Arafat on the sides of buildings. "Comrades of the  
revolution, peace of the brave," one banner declared.
 
"The end of the occupation, the security of the people, the development of  
the country," another banner said.
 
Abbas said peace with Israel was conditional on the release of all  
Palestinian prisoners, especially jailed uprising leader Marwan Barghouti.
 
Barghouti had initially planned to run for president, providing Abbas with  
stiff competition, but pulled out under intense pressure from members of the  
ruling Fatah party.
 
Listing his priorities, Abbas told supporters of the ruling Fatah party  that 
he was determined to provide security to his people and continue the  
struggle against Israel's partially completed West Bank barrier.
 
The barrier, which dips into the West Bank in some areas, has divided some  
Palestinian towns and at times separates farmers from their land and children  
from their schools. Despite widespread international condemnation, Israel has  
pressed continued construction of the 425-mile barrier, which is about 
one-third  complete.
 
Abbas also pledged to resolve the problem of millions of Palestinian  
refugees and their descendants. Abbas, a refugee himself from what is today the 
 
northern Israeli city of Safed, called the refugee issue "very important and  
very 
dangerous."
 
The refugees, who fled or were forced to flee their homes when Israel was  
established in 1948, want to return to their former homes.
 
Differences over the refugee issue and Jerusalem have been the most  
contentious issues in Israeli-Palestinian peace  negotiations.



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