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Blast levels house in Gaza, killing four However, Mubarak's spokesman Suleiman Awad told The Associated Press, "I can assure you that the president doesn't have any plans to go anywhere outside Egypt until the end of this year." "He is quite busy with so many things, the presidential and legislative elections, and doesn't have any plans to go anywhere outside Egypt," the spokesman added. The Egyptian leader has not visited Israel since Rabin's funeral in 1995, and Israeli officials interpreted his planned visit as sending a message to other Arab and Muslim countries that Israel should be rewarded for evacuating 21 settlements in Gaza and four in the West Bank. Jordan's King Abdullah is also planning to visit Israel, Israeli government officials have said, but Jordanian officials have not confirmed that.
"Once we make peace, once the occupation is over, once there is a Palestinian state, (Israel) will have full normal relations," Erekat said. Israel made progress last week when Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom met publicly for the first time with his Pakistani counterpart, Khursheed Kasuri. However, Palestinian President Gen. Pervez Musharraf said there would be no full relations with Israel until a Palestinian state is established. A five-member Israeli delegation is currently in Tunisia planning Shalom's November visit to participate in a U.N. conference, Regev said. The trip to Tunisia has special significance for Shalom, who was born there in 1958. He immigrated to Israel when he was one year old and has never been back. Also Monday, dozens of unemployed workers in the Palestinian town of Khan Younis demonstrated outside a municipal building, demanding jobs and better living conditions. For a second straight day, the protest escalated into violent clashes with security forces. Protesters pelted riot police with stones and firebombs, and police fired into the air in an attempt to control the crowd. The Palestinian Interior Ministry said seven officers and three civilians were wounded. In Damascus, Syria, Hamas political leader Khaled Mashaal said that no Israeli presence is acceptable in the Gaza Strip. "Any presence means the occupation is still there," Mashaal told reporters after meeting in Damascus with the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization's mainstream Fatah faction, Farouk Kaddoumi. Mashaal reiterated earlier Hamas statements that Palestinian armed resistance drove Israel out of Gaza and that resistance "still is the only way to continue the road to liberation."
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