Hamas deal will open border: Dahlan
ramallah — An exiled Palestinian politician who quietly negotiated a power-sharing deal for Gaza with former foe Hamas discussed the details for the first time in an interview, saying he expects it to lead to a swift opening of the blockaded territory’s border with Egypt and an easing of crippling power outages.
The Egypt-Gaza border crossing is expected to open by late August and funding has been secured for a $100 million power plant, Mohammed Dahlan, a former Gaza security chief, said in a phone interview.
Dahlan said his chemistry with Gaza’s newly-elected Hamas chief, Yehiyeh Sinwar, helped forge the once unthinkable alliance. The two grew up in the tough streets of southern Gaza’s Khan Younis refugee camp before joining rival camps, the militant Hamas and the mainstream Fatah movement, respectively.
“We both realised it’s time to find a way out” for Gaza, Dahlan, 55, said in an hour-long conversation on Saturday.
He said both sides had learned lessons from the destructive rivalries of the past.
The deal is still in the early stages of implementation. There are no guarantees of success, but all involved seem to benefit.
It enables Egypt to contain Hamas, the militants on its doorstep, through new security arrangements. Dahlan has a chance to return to Palestinian politics. And cash-strapped Hamas can prolong its rule throughs the promised border opening. If it goes ahead, the deal could deliver a crushing blow to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who presides over autonomous enclaves in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
For more than two decades, Palestinian leaders, including Abbas, have unsuccessfully sought to establish a state in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in negotiations with Israel. Israel, which captured those territories in the 1967 Mideast war, withdrew from Gaza in 2005, but keeps a tight grip on the rest. The territories sit on opposite sides of Israel which has deepened the geographic separation with strict travel bans.
Dahlan dismissed concerns that his deal with Hamas will gradually turn Gaza into a separate entity.
“We are patriots, not separatists,” he said, adding that he would do everything in his power to prevent a further drifting apart of the Palestinian territories.
“I have no ambitions to be president,” he said. “Maybe that was the case when I was younger, but now I see the situation . ... Seventy percent of the land is in the hands of the Israelis, and they have no intentions to give us a state.”
Dahlan said the new deal is meant to revive Palestinian political institutions that have been paralyzed since the 2007 split between Hamas and Fatah. This would include a new attempt to form a national unity government and revive parliament. —