Iran Daily

Hamas says weapons a ‘red line’ after talks with Fatah

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The Palestinia­n resistance movement Hamas refused to be disarmed as part of a recent national reconcilia­tion deal with rival party Fatah, stressing that its weapons are not up for discussion.

“The resistance’s weapons cannot be divided… and all the red lines are under it,” senior Hamas official Khalil al-hayya said in a news conference in Gaza on Monday, noting that the movement has the right to resist the Israeli occupation until it ends, according to Press TV.

Hayya further expressed concern over recent remarks by senior Fatah officials but stressed that Hamas “will continue the path of reconcilia­tion to end the Palestinia­n division,” despite obstacles created by the rival group.

Meanwhile, Hayya urged the Palestinia­n Authority to lift sanctions against the Gaza Strip and called on the government to resolve the issue of employee payments.

Hamas and Fatah inked an historic reconcilia­tion deal in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, in October to put an end to their decade-long rivalry.

Fatah and Hamas have been at odds ever since the latter scored a landslide victory in Palestinia­n parliament­ary elections in 2006.

Since 2007, Hamas has been governing Gaza, while Fatah has been based in the autonomous parts of the Israeliocc­upied West Bank.

The two rival Palestinia­n factions finally agreed on a unity government in April 2014, but it fell apart months later.

According to the accord, Fatah will lift an array of punitive sanctions that it imposed on Hamas earlier this year. In return, Hamas will join the Palestinia­n Authority to form a unity government, which will exert its full control over the blockaded coastal sliver from the beginning of December.

The deal also requires some 3,000 members of the Palestinia­n Authority police force to be redeployed to Gaza, an unnamed member of the negotiatin­g team told the AFP.

Another party to the talks, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the accord would also see the unity government’s forces take control of Gaza’s borders, including the Rafah border crossing, a key gateway to Egypt.

 ??  ?? Hamas security forces march in the west of Gaza City. MOHAMMED SABER/EPA
Hamas security forces march in the west of Gaza City. MOHAMMED SABER/EPA

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