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Arab spring, stalled peace talks helped end Palestinian rift

Hamas won't push Fatah to end talks with Israel: Zahar
Cairo (AFP) April 28, 2011 - Hamas has no intention of pressing Fatah to halt peace talks with Israel following a unity deal between the two factions, a senior leader in the Islamist movement told AFP on Thursday.

Mahmud Zahar, a Hamas official from Gaza, said although the Islamists were committed to their strategy of "no recognition and no negotiations" with Israel, they would not insist that Fatah, which is headed by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, stop negotiating with Israel.

"If Fatah wants to bear the responsibility for negotiating on nonsense, let it. If it manages to get a state, good for them," Zahar told AFP in Cairo.

"We didn't view what was happening as a peace process, so we didn't take part in it," he said, referring to more than 20 years of talks which have yielded limited autonomy in the West Bank while Israel expanded its settlements in the territory.

Zahar said the interim government, which will be composed of figures agreed on by the two factions, would have no mandate to hold negotiations with Israel.

Both sides also agreed to release political prisoners and restructure the security forces in Gaza and West Bank.

Hamas, which rejects Israel's right to exist because it believes it was created on Palestinian land, has in the past said it would be willing to consider a long-term truce with the Jewish state.

The Islamist movement, which won a parliamentary election in 2006, seized power in the Gaza Strip a year later following a week of bloody street battles with Fatah.

Direct negotiations between Abbas's West Bank-based Palestinian Authority and Israel stalled late last year over an intractable dispute about ongoing Jewish settlement activity.

Following the collapse of peace talks, Abbas has been pursuing a diplomatic strategy aimed at securing UN recognition for a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with east Jerusalem as its capital, in a move likely to take place in September.

by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) April 28, 2011
Democratic upheavals in Arab countries and the failure of US-sponsored negotiations with Israel helped bring about a unity deal between feuding Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas, their officials said on Thursday.

The two sides have been bitterly opposed since Hamas seized the Gaza Strip in 2007, reducing Fatah's powerbase to the West Bank, and Egyptian-mediated efforts to end the rift repeatedly proved unsuccessful.

But in a surprise announcement on Wednesday after a low-key meeting in Cairo, leaders of the two factions announced that they reached the elusive agreement to form an interim government that would prepare for elections.

Mahmud Zahar, a senior Hamas official in Cairo for the talks, said "a change in the (regional) political environment and the failure in negotiations" influenced the two sides to reach an agreement.

Azzam al-Ahmed, who headed Fatah's delegation in Cairo, said the "Arab spring placed pressure" on both factions to end the division, which left the Palestinians with rival governments in Gaza and the West Bank.

"The people began to feel and demand their freedom," he said.

The mass protests in Tunisia and Egypt that ousted their leaders inspired thousands of Palestinians to take to the streets in Gaza and the West Bank to demand an end to the division.

"There was real pressure by all the factions and the Palestinian youth," Ahmed said.

The Egypt revolt also removed intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, whom Hamas had accused of favouring Fatah, from the negotiations he was mediating, while depriving Palestinian president Abbas of a key supporter in ousted leader Hosni Mubarak.

Ahmed added that the "obstruction in the peace process" helped bring the two sides to close the rift. "The division was an excuse (to prolong the occupation)," he said.

Direct negotiations between Abbas's West Bank-based Palestinian Authority and Israel stalled late last year over a dispute about ongoing Jewish settlement activity.

Following the collapse of peace talks, Abbas has been pursuing a diplomatic strategy aimed at securing UN recognition for a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with east Jerusalem as its capital, in a move likely to take place in September.



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