Israeli and Palestinian negotiators meeting US envoy Martin Indyk to try to find a way to extend faltering peace talks have failed to reach agreement, a Palestinian source said.
The meeting began in the late afternoon yesterday in a Jerusalem hotel but ended after five hours of "very difficult discussions", the source said.
"The gap (between the parties) is still wide. There was no breakthrough," added the Palestinian source.
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Israeli and Palestinian negotiators had met on their own on Sunday and held a three-way meeting with Indyk a week ago in last-ditch efforts to save the stagnant peace process launched by US Secretary of State John Kerry in July for a period of nine months.
State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said this week that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are striving to reach an agreement to extend the talks beyond their April 29 deadline.
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 which the Jewish state is refusing to set free.
The Palestinians retaliated by seeking accession to several international treaties.
Yesterday's new round of talks came as Palestinians marked Prisoners Day with rallies across the West Bank and Gaza Strip in solidarity with thousands of their jailed compatriots.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat added his voice to the protesters yesterday by calling anew on Israel to free the last batch of prisoners.