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Arab League members are meeting in Cairo this week to discuss
Arab League members are meeting in Cairo this week to discuss
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland argued Monday that neither course of action would lead to a "stable, secure state
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(Free-Press-Release.com) September 13, 2011 --
Some people walked through the rubble to assess the damage. Everything had turned into ash - from clothes to mattresses.
The fire swept through the slum.
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"I heard a loud explosion. Then I saw a ball of flame. All around me there was a fire," one woman told me.
There are no proper roads in Sinai - only narrow, twisting alleyways. This hampered relief efforts, as policemen and firemen battled to gain access to the explosion site.
Survivors were taken to Nairobi's Kenyatta hospital.
There, the scene was chaotic, as nurses and doctors rushed from patient to patient. They called for blood donors to come forward, and threw cooling blankets around victims of the explosion.
Most survivors had burns covering more than 30% of their bodies. Their skin had peeled off, hanging from their bodies.
Families and friends gathered at the hospital, anxious for news about their loved ones.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland argued Monday that neither course of action would lead to a "stable, secure state," saying that Palestinians and Israelis "have to do this through negotiations."
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Arab League members are meeting in Cairo this week to discuss the statehood bid. At the start of the meeting on Monday, Qatar's prime minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani said Arab countries had agreed to apply to the U.N. for a "full-fledged" Palestinian state.
After meeting with Arab leaders, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the EU had not "formulated a position" because Palestinians had not yet put a resolution on the table.
Last week, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for a return to negotiations, saying that an "independent, sovereign" Palestinian state was "long overdue."
Palestinians say they are seeking U.N. recognition after years of negotiations failed to deliver an independent Palestinian state. President Abbas backed out of U.S.-led negotiations last year, saying Palestinians object to continued construction of Israeli settlements on land they want for a future state

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