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Hamas hints
at relinquishing Gaza
Middle East Desk Report
GAZA CITY—Hamas has yielded ground for the first time since capturing
the Gaza Strip four months ago by announcing that its rule is temporary
and on Thursday again calling for talks with political rivals.
But Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has ruled out dialogue with Hamas
until it returns Gaza to his authority, ending the de facto division of
Palestinians that followed Hamas’s deadly seizure of the narrow strip.
Senior Hamas leader and former premier Ismail Haniya, who was sacked by
Abbas when the Islamists wrested control of the impoverished enclave,
told supporters late Wednesday: “our administration of Gaza is
temporary”.
Haniya declared that talks with Abbas’s Fatah party would resume after
this weekend’s Muslim feast of Eid al-Fitr, which follows the fasting
month of Ramadan, in an Arab state that he did not name.
Although Hamas has often called for dialogue since the mid-June
takeover, it was the first time the hardline group, certainly its
leadership, has hinted it could relinquish control of the territory.
The overture comes with Gaza cut off from the rest of the world, Hamas
boycotted internationally, saddled with sanctions and with Israel
threatening a serious offensive against what it has declared a “hostile
entity”.
“Hamas and the (sacked) government have a sincere desire to make
dialogue work,” Haniya’s spokesman Taher al-Nunu reiterated to reporters
on Thursday. Asked if Hamas would be willing to accept a return to the
status quo that prevailed before the mid-June takeover that routed Fatah
loyalists and killed more than 100 people, he replied: “everything is
open to discussion”. Abbas, whose power is limited to the West Bank, has
ruled out dialogue with Hamas unless it first renounces power that he
says was acquired in a coup. He has since appointed a new government
based in Ramallah.
Washington and Israel would likely cast a dim view on any rapprochement
between Abbas and Hamas, a group they blacklist as terrorist,
particularly at a time when Israelis and Palestinians are trying to
revive peace efforts.
Negotiating teams are now preparing for a much anticipated international
meeting on the conflict expected in the United States in November.
“Hamas is not extending an olive branch. Hamas wants to negotiate on the
basis of a coup and we tell them ‘first renounce the coup and we will be
ready to talk,’” said Abbas in an interview broadcast before Haniya
spoke.
Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Mark Regev warned that cosying up to
the Islamists could sabotage progress underway with moderate
Palestinians. “Bringing Hamas back into the equation today, Hamas being
opposed to peace and reconciliation and dialogue, will only serve to
torpedo the progress that has already been made,” he told reporters.
Nabil Shaath, a Fatah leader, said “no date had been set for dialogue
with Hamas and nothing of the kind is scheduled at the moment. “We
favour dialogue and national unity but we haven’t seen anything on the
ground from Hamas that reflects a real desire for dialogue,” he added.
Naji Shurrab, a political scientist at Al-Azhar University in Gaza City,
attributed Hamas’s gesture to the “dead-end” it faces. “In the current
regional and international context, an Islamic emirate or a separate
entity in Gaza would not be tolerated, hence the call for dialogue,” the
academic said. Next month’s expected US-sponsored international meeting,
to which Hamas is opposed anyway, also partly explains the softening of
its position.
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