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Friday, 30 September 2016

Shimon Peres funeral: World leaders gather in Israel

An Israeli man pays his respects at the coffin of former Israeli president Shimon Peres at the plaza outside the Knesset, Israel"s Parliament, on September 29, 2016 in Jerusalem.
The coffin of Mr Peres is lying in state outside parliament in Jerusalem
Dozens of world leaders are gathering in Israel to pay tributes to Shimon Peres, one of the country's founding fathers, who died on Wednesday aged 93.

Mr Peres' state funeral will be held in Jerusalem later on Friday. A massive security operation in preparation has so far led to the "preventative arrests" of several people.
In this Wednesday, Dec. 29, 1993, file photo, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres is all smiles along with PLO negotiator Mahmoud Abbas and Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa
Taken months after the Oslo Agreement was signed, this photograph shows Shimon Peres, left, with Mahmoud Abbas, centre, and Egypt's then Foreign Minister Amr Moussa
Guests include the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, who will visit Israel for the first time since 2010. The Israeli news website Haaretz reported that the visit comes at the request of Mr Abbas.

As a negotiator for the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), he was one of the people who signed the Oslo peace accords in 1993, for which Mr Peres won a Nobel Peace Prize the year after, along with Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin.


A senior Palestinian official told the Associated Press news agency that Mr Abbas wanted to "send a strong message to Israeli society that the Palestinians are for peace, and appreciate the efforts of peaceful men like Shimon Peres".

But a spokesman for Hamas, the more hardline Palestinian group which runs Gaza, called on Mr Abbas to "retract his decision to participate in the funeral of the criminal Shimon Peres".

Mr Peres' reputation in the region is complicated by the 1996 shelling of Qana in southern Lebanon that killed more than 100 people who were sheltering in a UN compound.

It happened when he was prime minister. He later said it was a "bitter surprise" to find that several hundred people were in the camp at the time. Only one country in the Middle East - Jordan - is sending an official representative.

Mixed reaction to Peres' legacy in world media
Long legacy of Israel's elder statesman
Obituary: Shimon Peres, Israeli founding father
World leaders pay tribute