Palestine's authority president Mahmud Abbas is pictured in Paris on September 12, 2013. (AFP Photo/Eric Feferberg)
WASHINGTON (AFP) - US
President Barack Obama will hold talks with Palestinian leader Mahmud
Abbas on Tuesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, the White
House said.Obama is due to address the annual assembly of world leaders
on Tuesday and will also find time to meet one-on-one with Abbas,
Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan and Lebanon's Michel Sleiman,
spokesman Ben Rhodes said.The meeting with Abbas comes six days before
the visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the White
House amid ongoing Israel-Palestinian peace negotiations."This is the
President's first opportunity to meet personally and at length with
President Abbas since the launch of direct negotiations between Israelis
and Palestinians," Rhodes said."The President will have an opportunity
to hear firsthand from President Abbas about the progress of those
negotiations," he added."This is an important opportunity for him to
reinforce the support of the United States for the progress that is
under way for the Middle East peace, and to welcome the courageous steps
that have been taken by both leaders and reinforcing the need to
continue to make progress given the opportunity that is presented
through these negotiations."Obama's meeting with Lebanese leader Sleiman
will focus on the refugee crisis triggered by the war in neighboring
Syria."This will give him an opportunity to discuss the extraordinary
refugee challenge confronted by Lebanon as they have to take onboard
many hundreds of thousands of Syrians who crossed the border," Rhodes
said."The US has provided support for Lebanon in dealing with that
challenge, and the leaders will be able to discuss the refugee situation
as well as the broader situation in Syria."
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