Vandals leave anti-Arab graffiti on mosque in Israel

JERUSALEM -  Vandals left anti-Arab graffiti on a mosque in northern Israel overnight and damaged a door of the building, Israeli police said Friday.
"There was an incident in which graffiti was written on a mosque in the city of Umm al-Faham," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told AFP, adding that the words "Arabs Out" were painted in Hebrew.
"Such incidents aim to harm relations between Arabs and Jews," Israeli news site Ynet quoted the mosque's imam, Jamil Mahagna, as saying. "We demand the arrest of the criminals," he added.
The attack also drew the condemnation of an interfaith group representing the main Jewish, Christian and Muslim bodies in the Holy Land. "The Council of Religious Institutions of the Holy Land condemns the act of vandalism... (and) repeated desecrations of holy sites," it said in a statement.
The council urged the Jewish state to "intensify efforts to capture and bring the perpetrators to justice." It was the latest in a string of racist and religious attacks over past weeks.
Meanwhile, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were to meet separately Friday with US peace envoy Martin Indyk, a Palestinian source said, a day after five hours of three-way talks failed to bring agreement.
Indyk was due to hold talks with chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat in the West Bank city of Jericho from 0800 GMT, the source said, but he had no details of the US-Israeli meeting and Israeli officials did not respond to requests for information.
Thursday's talks, in a Jerusalem hotel, were "very difficult", the source said.
State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said this week that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are striving to reach an agreement to extend their peace talks beyond an April 29 deadline.
But commentator Nahum Barnea, writing in Yediot Aharonot daily on Friday, likened the almost nine months of talks which Secretary of State John Kerry coaxed them into to prolonged "mutual torture".
"Kerry keeps them going like a gambler in a casino who insists in putting his money on the roulette wheel, with the hope that the wheel will stop on his number at some point," Barnea wrote.
"He believed that he would reach a peace agreement; then he limited himself to a framework agreement; he later limited himself even further to an American proposal for a framework; and then just to ideas.
"In the end, the entire prestige of the United States is invested in a marginal, questionable deal, which will only prolong the mutual torture."
Washington is pushing for an extension but the negotiations hit an impasse two weeks ago when Israel refused to release a group of Palestinian prisoners as agreed at last year's launch of the talks.
Under the agreement, Israel had committed to freeing 104 prisoners held since before the 1993 Oslo autonomy accords in four batches, but it cancelled the release of the last group of 26.
Among them are 14 Arab Israelis who the Jewish state is refusing to set free.
The Palestinians retaliated by seeking accession to several international treaties.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas told Israeli opposition MPs visiting him in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday that if talks were extended, he would want the first three months "devoted to a serious discussion of borders," Haaretz newspaper reported.
The Palestinians want a state based on the lines that existed before Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Six-Day War.

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