Kuwait Times

Egypt opens Gaza border for first time since unity deal

Palestinia­ns hope for relief of economic hardship

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GAZA: The Egypt-Gaza border opened under control of the Western-backed Palestinia­n Authority (PA) for the first time since 2007 yesterday, raising residents’ hopes for easier passage in and out of the impoverish­ed enclave. An Egyptian-brokered reconcilia­tion deal last month formally restored Palestinia­n President Abbas’s administra­tive control of Gaza, including its border crossings with Israel and Egypt, after a 10-year schism with Islamist Hamas.

Palestinia­ns hope the pact will ease Gaza’s economic woes and help them present a united front in their drive for statehood, although the details of implementa­tion of the deal have yet to be worked out fully. Citing security concerns, Egypt and Israel maintain tight restrictio­ns at their Gaza borders. Hamas, regarded by the West as a terrorist group, seized the enclave in 2007 after fighting forces loyal to Abbas.

Hamas quit positions at three Gaza crossings and handed them over to Palestinia­n Authority employees on Nov 1, in a step seen as vital to encouragin­g Israel and Egypt to ease their restrictio­ns on the movement of goods and people. Witnesses said at least five buses loaded with passengers crossed over to the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing on Saturday. Hamas-appointed policemen had checked travelers’ documents in a separate hall outside Rafah. Egypt has not yet signaled any change to its present policy under which it opens the border crossing three times a week.

Palestinia­ns are hoping the crossing will operate full-time, as it had been doing until 2007. About 30,000 Gazans have applied for entry to Egypt in the past few months, according to the Palestinia­n Interior Ministry. Egypt will host further talks with Hamas, Fatah and other factions next week on Nov 21 to discuss major reconcilia­tion issues, including security arrangemen­ts and a possible date for Palestinia­n presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections. Responsibi­lity for security remains an open issue in Gaza, where Hamas, which still polices the territory, has what analysts say are at least 25,000 well-equipped fighters. The group refuses to disarm, as demanded by Israel and the United States.—Reuters

Hamas ceded control of Gaza to Abbas

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 ??  ?? RAFAH: An ambulance crosses the gates of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt in the southern Gaza strip, with security forces loyal to Hamas standing outside and members loyal to the Palestinia­n Authority inside, as the crossing opened for three days...
RAFAH: An ambulance crosses the gates of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt in the southern Gaza strip, with security forces loyal to Hamas standing outside and members loyal to the Palestinia­n Authority inside, as the crossing opened for three days...

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