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Monday 8 September 2014 - 12:21

Israel's Lieberman doubts Gaza truce can last

Story Code : 408787
Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman speaks during a joint press conference with his Bulgarian counterpart after their meeting in Sofia on March 27, 2014
Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman speaks during a joint press conference with his Bulgarian counterpart after their meeting in Sofia on March 27, 2014
After briefing Israeli journalists he was quoted across the local media as saying that he thought the chances of Egypt-mediated talks achieving their goal of a durable Gaza truce were slim.
 
"Any ceasefire, in my opinion, will be limited in time," Lieberman said.
 
Disarming the coastal strip was not on the immediate horizon, he said, but it should be kept in the forefront of international public opinion.
 
"Demilitarization is not realistic at the moment," he was quoted as saying.
 
But he said that no other force but Israel would be capable of enforcing and verifying disarmament.
 
"Nobody will bring about disarmament but us," he said. "Nobody else will go from house to house like us."
 
At the start of a meeting with Norwegian Foreign Minister Boerge Brende, Lieberman said that the immediate challenge was how to allow reconstruction of war-shattered Gaza without allowing money and materials reaching Hamas, the de facto power in the territory.
 
"The issue is first of all how to rebuild the civilian infrastructure and prevent Hamas to rebuild the terrorist infrastructure," he said in English in remarks broadcast on local television and radio.
 
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin also raised the subject when he met Brende.
 
"The rehabilitation and reconstruction of Gaza should go along with the demilitarization of Gaza because otherwise we can see in no time the next round (of violence)," Rivlin said.
 
"If the Hamas people once again will spend all the money the whole world is trying to help them in order to reconstruct Gaza, put it into military aims and ability of attacking Israel once again, we can come to a dead end once again," he said, also in English.
 
The reconstruction of the Gaza Strip will cost $7.8 billion following Israel's devastating seven-week offensive, the Palestinian Economic Council for Development and Reconstruction said.
 
The Israeli assault cost the lives of more than 2,150 Gazans, destroyed thousands of homes, severely damaged the enclave's sole power plant, and burnt dozens of factories.
 
Israel imposed a severe blockade on Gaza in 2007 after Hamas was democratically elected into power.
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