This seems to be a break from the past when the Arab League failed to stand up to Israel and back Palestine.
The correllation of forces seems to have changed.
Arab
League 'backs Gaza against aggression'
Hamas
chief meets Egyptian president, Qatari emir and Turkish PM, as Arab
League foreign ministers issue statement.
18
November, 2012
Arab
League chief Nabil Elaraby has pledged to support Palestinians
against "Israel's aggression" and to end the blockade of
Gaza during talks between Arab foreign ministers in Cairo.
The
leaders said in a statement issued on Saturday that the Arab League
chief will lead a delegation to the Gaza Strip on Sunday and support
Egypt's efforts to negotiate a truce.
Maan
News Agency reported the delegation led by Elaraby will include Riyad
Al-Malki, the Palestinian foreign minister, and four other foreign
ministers. Hamas has not yet confirmed the plans for the visit.
Saturday's
meeting was called for after Israel launched a massive air campaign
on Wednesday with the declared aim of deterring Hamas, the
Palestinian group which controls Gaza, from launching cross-border
rocket salvoes.
Israeli
aircraft bombed Hamas government buildings on Saturday in the
Palestinian territory, after Israel's cabinet authorised the
mobilisation of up to 75,000 reservists, preparing for a possible
ground invasion.
Egypt
had brokered an informal truce in October, which has since collapsed.
It now says it is seeking a new deal.
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi said on Saturday there were "some
indications" a ceasefire could be reached soon between Israel
and Gaza Palestinians but he had no firm guarantees.
Truce
efforts continue
Rafik
Abdesslem, Tunisian foreign minister, visited Gaza on Saturday, a day
after Hisham Qandil, Egyptian prime minister, crossed the border into
the territory, condemning Israeli actions and pledging to work for a
truce.
"Israel
should understand that many things have changed and that lots of
water has run in the Arab river," Abdesslem said as he surveyed
Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh's office, reduced to rubble in a
morning air strike.
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi held four-way talks with the Qatari emir, the
prime minister of Turkey and Hamas leader Khaled Meshal in Cairo on
Saturday to discuss the Gaza crisis, a presidential source said.
Turkish
premier Tayyip Erdogan has been an outspoken critic of Israel, and
Qatar's emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, visited Gaza in
October, breaking the isolation of the Palestinian group. Both
arrived in Egypt earlier on Saturday.
Qatar
is to give Egypt $10m to help treat Palestinians wounded in Israeli
air strikes on the neighbouring Gaza Strip, state news agency QNA
reported on Saturday.
Erdogan,
whose trip was planned before the Gaza violence surged, spoke at
Cairo University on Saturday.
Meshal
held talks earlier on Saturday with Egyptian security officials on
prospects for a truce.
Morsi,
whose Muslim Brotherhood movement is closely aligned with Hamas,
recalled his ambassador from Israel and sent his prime minister to
Gaza in a show of solidarity.
But
he is unlikely to substantially change Egypt's policy on its single
border crossing with the territory, which Hamas wants to turn into a
trade gateway.
Egyptian
officials fear any such move would make them responsible for Gaza's
impoverished 1.6 million people, a burden they believe Israel should
bear.
And
it would alienate Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, whose Fatah
movement Hamas ousted from the territory in deadly fighting in 2007.
Ben
Rhodes, White House deputy national security adviser, told reporters
the US "wants the same thing as the Israelis want", which
is an end to rocket attacks.
The
US is emphasising diplomacy and "de-escalation" as keys to
solving the conflict, Rhodes said.
In
other developments, Jordan's King Abdullah II ordered on Saturday the
dispatch of immediate support to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
The
Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organisation was instructed to "send
urgent humanitarian aid to the Palestinian people in Gaza who are
facing suffering and difficult living conditions due to Israeli
attacks," the royal palace said.
King
Abdullah also called for the adoption of "urgent procedures
needed to ... support the Jordanian military field hospital currently
working in the Gaza Strip," the statement said.
The
palace said the measures were aimed at providing "all the
necessary medical care to children of the brotherly Palestinian
people ... in view of the difficult circumstances in the face of
Israeli aggression".
On
Friday, King Abdullah told Hillary Clinton, US secretary of state, in
a phone call that he was "deeply worried" about the
implications for the whole region of Israel's air strikes on the Gaza
Strip.
The
king, whose government has a 1994 peace agreement with Israel, has
been facing a wave of domestic protests initially sparked by big fuel
price increases but which have taken on increasingly political
overtones.
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