New Straits Times

FATAH HITS BACK AT CRITICISM OF NEW PM

Hamas, other factions said appointmen­t of new PM could deepen divisions amid war

- RAMALLAH

PALESTINIA­N President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party hit back at criticism on Friday by Hamas and other factions over his appointmen­t of a new prime minister they said could deepen divisions as the war with Israel in Gaza rages.

Abbas appointed Mohammed Mustafa, a long-trusted adviser on economic affairs, as prime minister on Thursday and tasked him with forming a new government.

But the factions said in a statement on Friday that “making individual decisions and engaging in formal steps that are devoid of substance, like forming a new government without national consensus, is a reinforcem­ent of a policy of exclusion and the deepening of division”.

Such steps point to a “huge gap between the (Palestinia­n) Authority and the people, their concerns and their aspiration­s”, they said.

The other signatorie­s were Islamic Jihad, the second-largest fighter group in Gaza, the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Palestinia­n National Initiative, a political party which seeks a third way between Fatah and Hamas.

Mustafa replaces Mohammed Shtayyeh, who resigned less than three weeks ago citing the need for change after the Hamas attack of Oct 7 triggered war with Israel.

He accepted the appointmen­t and said in a letter to Abbas published on Friday that he was “well aware of the severity of the... dire circumstan­ces that the Palestinia­n people are going through”.

Fatah hit back at Hamas late on Friday, accusing the Islamist movement of “having caused the return of the Israeli occupation of Gaza” by “undertakin­g the Oct 7 adventure”.

This led to a “catastroph­e even more horrible and cruel than that of 1948”, they said, a reference to the displaceme­nt and expulsion of 760,000 Palestinia­ns from their lands at the creation of Israel.

“The real disconnect­ion from reality and the Palestinia­n people is that of the Hamas leadership,” said Fatah, accusing Hamas of not having itself “consulted” the other Palestinia­n leaders before launching its attack on Israel.

The Oct 7 attack resulted in the deaths of around 1,160 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli figures.

The retaliator­y Israeli military offensive in Gaza has killed at least 31,490 people, most of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s Health Ministry.

Mustafa, 69, now faces the task of forming a new government for the Palestinia­n Authority, which has limited powers in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Control of the Palestinia­n territorie­s has been divided between Abbas’ Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank and Hamas in the Gaza Strip since 2007.

Analysts said Mustafa’s closeness to Abbas would limit chances for major reform of the Palestinia­n Authority.

The United States and other powers have called for a reformed Palestinia­n Authority to take charge of all Palestinia­n territorie­s after the war ends.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has rejected post-war plans for Palestinia­n sovereignt­y.

 ?? AFP PIC / PALESTINIA­N AUTHORITY’S PRESS OFFICE ?? Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas (left) with newly appointed Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in Ramallah on Thursday.
AFP PIC / PALESTINIA­N AUTHORITY’S PRESS OFFICE Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas (left) with newly appointed Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in Ramallah on Thursday.

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