Manawatu Standard

Unity in Gaza a step closer

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MIDDLE EAST: The West Bankbased Palestinia­n prime minister crossed into the Gaza Strip yesterday in a move towards reconcilia­tion between the mainstream Fatah party and Hamas, a decade after the Islamist group seized the territory in a civil war.

Rami al-hamdallah said at a welcome ceremony that his unity government would begin assuming control of Gaza’s administra­tive affairs, as well as ‘‘security responsibi­lities and responsibi­lity for crossings and borders’’.

Hamas, considered a terrorist group by Israel and the West, made its dramatic step towards unity last month, disbanding its Gaza shadow government, after Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates imposed an economic boycott on its main donor, Qatar, over alleged support of terrorism. Qatar denies the allegation.

Under previous understand­ings, some 3000 Fatah security men will be integrated gradually into a Gaza police force overseen by an Interior Ministry headed by Hamdallah.

That deployment would still leave Hamas’s armed wing – analysts say it has at least 25,000 well-equipped fighters – the dominant power in the Palestinia­n enclave of 2 million people.

‘‘We return to Gaza in order to conclude reconcilia­tion and national unity and end the painful impacts of divisions, and to rebuild Gaza brick by brick,’’ said Hamdallah, an independen­t.

Forces loyal to Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas lost control of Gaza in fighting with Hamas in 2007.

Hamas’s reversal is the most significan­t step towards Palestinia­n reconcilia­tion since the unity government was formed in 2014. It failed to function in Gaza – where Israel and Hamas have fought three wars since 2008 – because of disputes between Hamas and Fatah over its responsibi­lities.

In his first comments after Hamdallah and his entourage entered Gaza, Abbas said that his sanctions on the enclave would be lifted after the unity government took control, adding that there could be only one regime setting laws and enforcing them.

Analysts said narrowing internal divisions could help Westernbac­ked Abbas counter Israel’s argument that it has no negotiatin­g partner for peace with the Palestinia­ns.

The unity drive also marks a return to prominence of exiled former Gaza security chief Mohammed Dahlan, once one of Hamas’s fiercest enemies and now a leading figure in regional efforts to pull the territory back into the Palestinia­n mainstream. Dahlan, based since 2011 in the UAE, is behind an influx of cash to prop up Gaza and detente between Hamas and Arab states including Egypt, which hosted reconcilia­tion talks.

Michael Oren, deputy minister for diplomacy in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet, said a key issue for Israel was whether Hamas, which is dedicated to Israel’s destructio­n, would retain its weapons.

Israel and Egypt maintain a partial blockade of Gaza, citing security concerns.

In public remarks at a lunch with Hamdallah, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh appeared to be uncompromi­sing about any accommodat­ion with Israel, calling for the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state ‘‘on the full Palestinia­n soil with Jerusalem as its capital and the return of refugees to their lands and homes’’.

– Reuters

 ??  ?? Palestinia­n Prime Minister Rami alhamdalla­h
Palestinia­n Prime Minister Rami alhamdalla­h

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