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WASHINGTON - Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas told Israel yesterday he could push militants into declaring a ceasefire on suicide bombings if Israel made concessions. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon replied by saying he would end the two-week-old closure on the West Bank, allow 25,000 Palestinian workers to enter Israel, ease some roadblocks and release some prisoners. And in a further boost to the hopes of winning a Mideast peace deal, President Bush told the Dubai-based satellite channel Al Arabiya he would look Arab leaders in the eyes during his Arab summit next week and tell them peace is possible and that he would work to achieve that goal. Sharon and Abbas held their second meeting in two weeks yesterday in an effort to create common ground for their session with Bush next week. But stark differences remained in the demands of the two sides. Abbas said he was upbeat about securing, as early as next week, conditional offers from Hamas and Islamic Jihad to halt their suicide bombing campaigns in Israel, aides said. "If there is a readiness by Israel to stop its military actions against us and start freeing political prisoners, I think we are ready to guarantee a total cessation of violence," Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath told Israel TV. Abbas called for an end to Israeli military action in Gaza and the West Bank, halting the house arrest of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and the breakup of illegal Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories. Sharon demanded that Abbas do more than just secure a ceasefire, calling for "dismantling terrorist organizations, arresting terrorists and confiscating illegal weapons," the Israeli government said in a statement. A total halt to suicide attacks may prove difficult for Abbas, since one terrorist group, the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, vowed to continue its campaign. He's the man Arab leaders, who say they still recognize Arafat as the Palestinian leader, say it is essential that Abbas succeed. "There is no hope other than ," Jordanian Ambassador Karim Kawar told the Israel Policy Forum. "It's very important to give the new prime minister the support that he requires in order to fight terrorism. He needs to wage a war within against Hamas and against Jihad]." Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), meanwhile, will meet today with Lebanese and Syrian officials, hoping to stimulate their stalled peace process with Israel. Issa was floating his own plan to give Lebanon $500 million in exchange for disarming Hezbollah terrorists and securing the border with Israel. The State Department and White House said Issa was free-lancing, although they support any efforts to end Hezbollah's reign.
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WASHINGTON - Clutching photos of loved ones, families of Sept. 11 victims rallied outside the Capitol yesterday to support the creation of an independent commission to investigate the events that led to the attacks. "Nine months later, we are still overwhelmed with despair and disbelief and ask, 'How could this happen?' " said Kristen Breitweiser, 31, of Middletown, N.J., who lost her husband, Ronald, in Tower 2. "Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it," said Breitweiser, one of more than 100 New York-area citizens who took buses, flew or drove to Washington for the rally, attended by 300 people. Behind them, House and Senate committees met in private to examine lapses in intelligence-sharing by government officials before Sept. 11. Supporters of an independent commission - including Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) and House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) - said at the rally that the ongoing inquiry is not enough. The White House opposes an outside panel. "We're not here to point fingers," added Mary Fetchet of New Canaan, Conn., who lost her son Brad, 24, at the World Trade Center. "If we don't find out what happened, how can we move forward?" Fetchet said she attended "as a mother looking for answers to questions that are haunting all of us." Steven Push, who lost his wife, Lisa, on American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon, said he and others wouldn't give up the quest. "This is not a one-time event," said Push, of Great Falls, Va. "This not the end of the process. This is the beginning. We are not going away." Eileen Morello, 52, of Bayonne, N.J., three children and a son-in-law held a bedsheet that read, "Don't let Steven P. Morello and his colleagues die in vain. Investigate now." Steven Morello was a facilities manager at Marsh & McLennan. Fighting back tears yesterday, Eileen Morello said, "If terrorists could do this to a man like Steve Morello, God knows what they can do. How could we not come here? We want answers."
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The mayor and police commissioner laid down the law yesterday to a shadowy vigilante group that plans shotgun-toting patrols of Brooklyn Jewish neighborhoods: Keep away or be arrested. "We will not tolerate vigilantes in this city," Mayor Bloomberg declared. "We will not tolerate people going around with guns in this city, acting unto themselves." Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said the NYPD "will not tolerate anyone brandishing weapons under the guise of protecting others. Anyone attempting to patrol the streets armed with a weapon will be arrested." But last night, the head of the Jewish Defense Group, the militant organization planning the armed civilian patrols, said he was exploring whether followers can carry unloaded shotguns to get around the law. "He's just doing his job," Rabbi Yakove Lloyd said of Kelly. "We'reing to do ours." Arousing the ire of city officials and community leaders in Brooklyn, Lloyd announced his group would patrol Borough Park and south Flatbush starting this weekend. Prompting plans for the armed patrols, Lloyd said, was a television report that 1993 World Trade Center bombing mastermind Ramzi Yousef told an accomplice that he originally wanted "to blow up Jewish neighborhoods in Brooklyn." The accomplice, Abdul Rahman Yasin, now hiding in Iraq, is still being sought by the FBI in the 1993 bombing. Yasin told "60 Minutes" that the twin towers, rather than Brooklyn's neighborhoods, became the target because of a suspicion that most of the people working there were Jewish. "We still believe the threat is real," said Lloyd, who claims a membership of 4,000 in his 17-year-old group, an offshoot of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane's Jewish Defense League. Kahane was gunned down by an Islamic extremist at a New York hotel in 1990. Community leaders said Lloyd's armed group is not wanted. David Pollock, assistant executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Group of New York, said the NYPD is "doing a terrific job, and if people are concerned neighborhood security], we are urging them to join the police auxiliary." Chanina Sperlin, of the Crown Heights Jewish Community Council, agreed. "We are the eyes and ears of the Police Department," Sperlin said. "We don't need anyone else coming into the community saying we have guns and we have bats. We live peacefully with our neighbors." Lloyd said his organization was focusing on Borough Park, but Assemblyman Dov Hikind warned him not to show his face. "Don't think of coming into our neighborhoods to stir up trouble," said the Borough Park-based lawmaker. "We don't want you and we don't need you."
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