HAMAS AND FATAH ‘SEEK TO MAKE UP’ IN BEIJING
Report comes after major power shuffle in the Palestinian Authority and as central government says it is willing to mediate in Arab-Israel conflict
China has not confirmed whether two rival Palestinian groups are meeting in Beijing, saying only that Beijing backs “internal reconciliation among Palestinian factions through dialogue and consultation”.
It followed a report from Riyadh-based Arab News that Hamas and Fatah were holding talks in Beijing yesterday aiming to end their internal divisions.
The foreign ministry has not responded to a request for comment from the Post.
The report came after a major power shuffle in the Fatah-led West Bank as Washington pressured the party to step into the Israel-Gaza war and prepare post-war reforms in the Hamascontrolled Gaza Strip.
Following last year’s peace deal reached between China, Iran and Saudi Arabia, Beijing said it was willing to mediate in the Israel-Gaza conflict. Beijing has not condemned Hamas for the October 7 attack on Israel despite pressure from the West.
Last month, the Palestinian Authority, the Fatah-led interim governing body, formed a government led by newly appointed Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa, who said ending the war was a “top national priority”.
But Hamas, which overturned the Palestinian Authority’s rule in Gaza 17 years ago, opposed the move, saying the change was “a reinforcement of a policy of exclusion and the deepening of division”.
In an official statement with other Palestinian factions, Hamas said the new government pointed to a “huge gap between the [Palestinian] Authority and the people, their concerns and their aspirations”. In response, Fatah said Hamas’ “October 7 adventure … caused the return of the Israeli occupation of Gaza” and led to a “catastrophe even more horrible and cruel than that of 1948”, referring to a war in which Israel was established, resulting in the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.
China, like most countries that recognise Palestine, regards the
West Bank-based Palestinian Authority as the legitimate government, but has also maintained communication with Hamas.
The only publicly acknowledged meeting between the two since the war began was in March when Chinese envoy Wang Kejian met Ismail Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’ political bureau, in Qatar.
After a tour of the Middle East last month aimed at laying the groundwork for a ceasefire and improving humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip, Wang told China’s state-owned CGTN Arabic that Haniyeh along with other Arab leaders “expressed their aspiration and hope for a greater role for China”.
Beijing has sought a more proactive role in Middle East affairs beyond economic influence after it brokered the Riyadh-Tehran peace deal last year.
Washington, the major player in the region for decades, has also called on Beijing to help rein in the regional conflict, including the crisis in the Red Sea, as well as issues related to Iran.
Earlier this month, as Iran and Israel exchanged air strikes, China called on Iran and Saudi Arabia to limit the escalating spillovers of the Israel-Gaza war.
Tehran told Beijing that it would exercise restraint and would not escalate the situation.
On Thursday, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Beijing would “firmly support” internal reconciliation among Palestinian factions through dialogue.
He reaffirmed that Beijing supported Palestine’s full membership of the United Nations, which was vetoed by the US earlier this month, and supported Palestinian nationhood and the right to self-government.
“We advocate convening a larger, more authoritative and more effective international peace conference as soon as possible, and formulating a concrete timetable and road map to implement the two-state solution,” Wang said in the interview. “Ultimately, [we should] achieve the peaceful coexistence of the two states of Palestine and Israel and the harmonious coexistence of the two peoples – the Arabs and the Jews.”