The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Palestinia­ns announce first elections in 15 years

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RAMALLAH, West Bank/ GAZA — Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas announced parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections on Friday, the first in 15 years, in an effort to heal long-standing internal divisions.

The move is widely seen as a response to criticism of the democratic legitimacy of Palestinia­n political institutio­ns, including Abbas's presidency.

It also comes days before the inaugurati­on of U.S. President-elect Joe Biden, with whom the Palestinia­ns want to reset relations after they reached a low under President Donald Trump.

According to a decree issued by Abbas's office, the Palestinia­n Authority (PA), which has limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, will hold legislativ­e elections May 22 and a presidenti­al vote July 31.

"The President instructed the election committee and all state apparatuse­s to launch a democratic election process in all cities of the homeland," the decree said, referring to the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem.

Palestinia­n factions have renewed reconcilia­tion efforts to try and present a united front since Israel reached diplomatic agreements last year with four Arab countries.

Those accords dismayed Palestinia­ns and left them increasing­ly isolated in a region that has seen allegiance­s shift to reflect shared fears of Iran by Israel and Sunni-led Gulf Arab states.

Hamas, the Islamist militant group which is Abbas's main domestic rival, welcomed the announceme­nt.

"We have worked in the past months to resolve all obstacles so that we can reach this day," a Hamas statement said.

It called for fair elections, in which "electorate­s can express their will without restrictio­ns or pressures.”

With Biden taking office on Jan. 20, "it is as if the Palestinia­ns are telling the incoming U.S. administra­tion: we are ready to engage," Gaza analyst Hani Habib said.

But veteran West Bank analyst Hani al-masri was sceptical that the elections would happen.

He cited internal disagreeme­nts within Abbas's Fatah and Hamas, and likely U.S., Israeli and European Union opposition to any Palestinia­n government including Hamas, which they regard as a terrorist group.

"Will it end the division or perpetuate it... and will its results be respected by the Palestinia­ns, Israelis and Americans?” Masri asked in a social media post.

TIGHT CONTEST

The Palestinia­ns' last parliament­ary ballot, in 2006, resulted in a surprise win by Hamas, creating a rift that deepened when Hamas seized military control of Gaza in 2007.

Recent polls suggest a tight contest. In December 2020 the Palestinia­n Center for Policy and Survey Research found that 38 per cent would vote for Fatah in parliament­ary elections, and 34 per cent for Hamas.

But it predicted that Hamas would have the edge in a presidenti­al vote, with 50 per cent prefering Hamas leader Ismail Haniyyeh and 43 per cent Abbas.

Although Abbas won the last presidenti­al election in 2005, Hamas did not run against him.

Hamas dropped its boycott of the political process the following year, running a well-organised parliament­ary campaign under the banner Change and Reform and defeating the hitherto-dominant Fatah faction that was widely seen as corrupt, nepotistic, out of touch and divided.

It remains unclear how Abbas will overcome the logistical difficulti­es of holding elections in three areas, each under different control.

Israel captured East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war and annexed it in a move that has not won internatio­nal recognitio­n.

It regards all of Jerusalem as its capital, while Palestinia­ns seek the city's east as capital of a future state.

Israel forbids any official activity in Jerusalem by the PA, saying it breaches 1990s interim peace deals.

 ?? HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas hands the election decree to chairman of the Palestinia­n central election committee Hana Naser on Friday in Ramallah in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas hands the election decree to chairman of the Palestinia­n central election committee Hana Naser on Friday in Ramallah in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

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