Arab News

Palestinia­ns yearning for new elections

‘Idea is for all to be represente­d in the first true unity government’

- Daoud Kuttab Amman

Palestinia­ns welcomed the call by President Mahmoud Abbas made at the UN General Assembly for general elections in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

Nabil Shaath, senior adviser to Abbas, told Arab News that the election idea had been presented to Hamas via the Egyptians repeatedly. According to Shaath, the Palestinia­n proposal will help resolve the current Palestinia­n division and stalemate: “The offer for elections is to produce a representa­tive unity government regardless of who wins.”

Shaath said that the idea is for all to be represente­d in the first true unity government, which would help ease the current unificatio­n. “The idea combines democratic and pluralisti­c principles. It will not be

A ‘WELCOME' STEP

winner takes all but a representa­tive government based on election results. Once a unity government is establishe­d with all parties in it, we can move to the next step of a presidenti­al elections,” he said.

Prime Minister Mohamad Shtayyeh, who is participat­ing in the Ministeria­l Meeting of the Internatio­nal Donor Group for Palestine in New York, said that his government is ready to immediatel­y begin all necessary steps to hold elections. “After the announceme­nt made by President Abbas, we are ready to proceed with the preparatio­ns for elections as has been detailed in the letter of appointmen­t of our government,” said Shtayyeh in a statement by the Palestinia­n government. Majed Aruri, executive director of the Commission for the Independen­ce of the Judiciary and the Rule of Law, said that the offer made by Abbas in New York is serious. “Abbas made the announceme­nt at the UN General Assembly so that the internatio­nal community will support the elections and renew Palestinia­n democratic life.”

Aruri agreed with Shaath that the elections could be an instrument to end the division and allow a new leadership to emerge. “Elections will allow us to enter the difficult battle for liberation with a unified and legitimate leadership.” Samir Abdallah, senior researcher at the Palestine Economic Policy Research Institute, told Arab News that the election offer is not new and it is challenged by the same problems it has always faced. “Successful elections require both Hamas and Israel to agree to them and this is not possible at the present time in my view.”

Nahed Abu Tuimeh, a lecturer in gender sensitivit­y at Birzeit University, said that Palestinia­ns genuinely want to have elections but it is not clear yet if the circumstan­ces are ripe. “It is true that the internatio­nal community has failed, Europe is ineffectiv­e and Israel is in denial, but at the same time Palestinia­ns badly need unity to move forward.”

Abu Tuimeh, who was born in Gaza but lives in Ramallah, doubts that Hamas is willing to agree to elections: “I don’t believe that Hamas will agree to lose what it has held on for some time through elections.”

 ?? AFP ?? UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, right, meets with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas at the 74th session of the UN General Assembly in New York.
AFP UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, right, meets with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas at the 74th session of the UN General Assembly in New York.

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