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Haniyeh offers to quit for aid resumption
Foreign Desk Report
GAZA CITY (Gaza Strip)—Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said Friday he would
step down as Palestinian prime minister if that would persuade the West
to lift debilitating economic sanctions.
“When the issue of the siege is on one side, and my being prime minister
is on the other, let the siege be lifted to end the suffering of the
Palestinian people,” he said, referring to the international aid boycott
that has devastated the Palestinian economy. His offer appeared to be
another indication that the Islamic militant group and the rival Fatah
Party of President Mahmoud Abbas were inching closer to a national unity
government made up of independent experts — a coalition that presumably
would present a more moderate face to the world.
Haniyeh, a longtime Hamas leader, told worshippers at a Gaza mosque that
Western countries wanted him out of government. The West and Israel have
withheld hundreds of millions of dollars in aid and tax revenues since
Hamas took power in March in an effort to pressure the ruling group to
moderate its violently anti-Israel ideology. The sanctions have
prevented Hamas from paying a large portion of the salaries owed to
165,000 government employees, causing widespread hardship in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip. The international community, including the United
States, has said it will not lift sanctions unless Hamas recognizes
Israel, renounces violence and accepts past peace deals, something Hamas
has so far refused to do.
The program of the proposed new unity government is vague on the key
issue of recognizing Israel, calling for a Palestinian state on only the
lands captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast War. On Thursday, Abbas
spoke by phone to his main political rival, Hamas’ supreme leader Khaled
Mashaal — their first conversation in months. Hamas spokesman Fawzi
Barhoum said their discussion was proof that the two are in agreement on
the shape of the new government. However, weeks of up-and-down
negotiations have failed to yield results, and a fresh breakdown in
talks appeared possible.
The death toll from Israel’s artillery barrage in the northern Gaza
Strip town of Beit Hanoun rose to 19 on Friday after Israeli hospital
officials confirmed that one of the wounded transferred to Israel,
Bassem Kafarna, had died in Tel Aviv’s Ichilov hospital. The shells
landed Wednesday as residents were sleeping. It was the highest
Palestinian civilian toll in a single incident since the current
conflict erupted in September 2000. The highest toll of Israeli
civilians was 29 killed in a Palestinian suicide bombing at a Passover
gathering in March 2002. The army said it was targeting areas where
rockets had been fired in recent days at the Israeli cities. It said an
investigation indicated the casualties were caused by a technical
failure in the fire control system of an artillery battery.
In an interview with NBC’s “Today” show on Friday, Olmert, who is
traveling to Washington next week, defended himself against critics who
said Israel was using too much force against the Palestinians. |