The Asian Age

Palestinia­n factions agree for 2018 national election

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Cairo, Nov. 23: Leading Palestinia­n political factions agreed Wednesday on the need to hold elections by the end of 2018, they said in a joint statement issued after two days of reconcilia­tion talks in Cairo.

The factions called on the electoral commission to prepare for the presidenti­al and legislativ­e polls and also asked Palestinia­n president Mahmud Abbas to set a date for them after consulting with all sides.

Wednesday’s statement also praised a unity agreement struck between the two largest parties — Hamas and Fatah — in October aimed at ending a 10- year rift between them and under which Hamas is to cede power in the Gaza Strip by December 1.

The closed- door talks opened on Tuesday, aimed at pushing ahead with the reconcilia­tion efforts, and were attended by representa­tives of 13 political parties. The statement said the Egyptian- sponsored unity deal between the Islamist movement Hamas and Abbas’s Fatah party was a “realistic start to end divisions”.

It underscore­d the “importance of removing all obstacles in the path of the government’s efforts to immediatel­y assume its responsibi­lities towards our people”. There have been no Palestinia­n parliament­ary elections since Hamas

seized control of Gaza in 2007 from Fatah, which dominates the Palestinia­n Authority government in the Israeli- occupied West Bank.

Palestinia­n and internatio­nal leaders hope implementa­tion of the unity deal could help ease the hardships of Gaza’s two million residents, who suffer from severe poverty and unemployme­nt. The division between Palestinia­n factions has also been cited as one of the largest obstacles to meaningful peace talks with the Israelis. It faces significan­t stumbling blocks, in particular the future of Hamas’s vast armed wing.

 ?? — AP ?? People walk in front of the monument of late Serbian Duke, Mihailo Obrenovic, arranged with picture of former Bosnian Serb wartime general Ratko Mladic and a banner reading: ‘ Serbs and Russians — brothers forever’ in Belgrade, Serbia, on Wednesday.
— AP People walk in front of the monument of late Serbian Duke, Mihailo Obrenovic, arranged with picture of former Bosnian Serb wartime general Ratko Mladic and a banner reading: ‘ Serbs and Russians — brothers forever’ in Belgrade, Serbia, on Wednesday.

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