Mahmod Abbas (below)and Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal (above) hailed
a new Palestinian “partnership” after talks to implement a landmark
reconciliation deal.
Let me think about this one.... Hamas, an arm of the CIA funded Muslim Brotherhood, and Fatah, branch of Israeli Zionism now see past their difference and are joining hands in unison? Sounds like some fiddling around from Tel Aviv going on here.
November 26, 2011
Speaking to reporters after several hours of talks, the two
leaders said they had managed to iron out their differences and turn over a new
page in their strained relationship.
“We want to assure our people and the Arab and Islamic world
that we have turned a major new and real page in partnership on everything do
to with the Palestinian nation,” Mr. Meshaal said.
“There are no more differences between us now,” added President
Abbas, who heads the Fatah movement. “We have agreed to work as partners with
joint responsibility.”
It was the first time the two men had held face-to-face talks
since they met to sign a reconciliation deal in early May.
Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmed told AFP the talks had focused on
terms of the unity agreement and on how it should be implemented.
All the movements who signed the reconciliation agreement in May
will be invited to put the final touches on it and start applying it on the
ground, and to move forward towards ending the division, and elections,” he
told AFP.
They also discussed “the question of a truce in the West Bank
and Gaza with Israel, and the question of popular resistance,” he said.
Key issues on the agenda were a unified Palestinian strategy,
hammering out an interim government, reforming the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) and agreeing on a date for elections, officials said.
After a summer of skepticism over prospects for a real
rapprochement between President Abbas’s secular Fatah movement and its Islamist
rival Hamas, a new optimism has emerged in recent weeks.
“President Abbas intends to deploy all possible efforts to reach
a global Palestinian agreement and reach an understanding on a common political
vision for all the movements,” Mr. Ahmed said in comments echoed by Hamas
officials.
“We want this meeting to open a new page and a new hope for the
Palestinian people,” Hamas deputy head Mussa Abu Marzuk told AFP on arrival in
the Egyptian capital.
Hamas and Fatah, which respectively control the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip, have long been political rivals, but tensions spilt over into
deadly violence in 2007 with Hamas forces eventually routing their Fatah rivals
and taking control of the Gaza Strip.
They signed a surprise agreement in May which called for the
immediate formation of an interim government to pave the way for presidential
and parliamentary elections within a year.
But it has yet to be implemented with the two sides bickering
over the composition of the caretaker government and, in particular, who will
head it.
The deal has been criticized by Israel, with Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu saying he hoped Abbas “would stop the reconciliation process
with Hamas.”
The accord has also been received with caution in Washington and
the European Union, prompting Hamas official Izzat al-Rishq to accuse both of
seeking to perpetuate Palestinian political division.
Both Washington and Brussels have said they will not work with a
government that includes Hamas unless the Islamists recognize Israel, renounce
violence and agree to abide by previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements.
“Unfortunately the Americans and Europeans have taken negative
positions on the meeting between the brothers Meshaal and Abbas,” Mr Rishq
said.
“This position is the result of their desire for the
continuation of the Palestinian division so they can continue to impose their
dictates on the Palestinian people.”
On Wednesday, the EU’s acting representative to the Palestinian
territories said he had “very low expectations” that the meeting would break
the deadlock in implementing the unity deal.
“I wouldn’t expect much progress right now,” John Gatt-Rutter
told reporters in Jerusalem, pointing out that Hamas and Fatah were “very far
apart” on forming a government, agreeing a date for elections and reforming the
PLO.
In the West Bank city of Ramallah, around 200 people gathered to
show support for the talks, chanting: “Those who are meeting in Cairo should
bring back unity.”
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