By Irwin Arieff
UNITED NATIONS, April 24 (Reuters) - The three-year-old road map to Middle East peace has been overtaken by events and needs updating to reflect the grimmer situation on the ground, a top U.N. diplomat told the Security Council on Monday.
The refusal of the Palestinians' new Hamas government to reject violence and Israel's continued pursuit of settlement expansion and its barrier cutting deeply into Palestinian territory are among the developments making the road map unlikely to achieve its goals, said Alvaro de Soto, the U.N. special envoy for the Middle East peace process.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has invited the quartet of international mediators, the plan's creators, to New York on May 9 to discuss next steps, de Soto said.
"We must deal with the new situation with the right mixture of firm adherence to basic principles and creativity to meet a rapidly evolving reality," he said.
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During the first two weeks of April, the Israeli military fired 2,415 artillery shells and 62 F-16 missiles inside the Gaza Strip, while Palestinian militants fired at least 113 rockets toward Israel, according to a U.N. count, he said.
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