The Jerusalem Post

PLO groups praised for not joining gov’t

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

Hamas on Monday praised several Palestinia­n factions for their refusal to join a new Palestinia­n Authority government.

“The refusal of major PLO factions to participat­e in the new government is a step in the right direction to stop the policy of singularit­y and to affirm that there is no alternativ­e to partnershi­p and national consensus,” said Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri.

His statement came in response to the announceme­nt by a number of PLO factions, including the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) the and Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), that they will not be part of the new government. The groups said that the formation of such a government would solidify the divide between the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Last week, PA Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah submitted his government’s resignatio­n to President Mahmoud Abbas. The move came shortly after the Fatah Central Committee recommende­d that Abbas establish a new government consisting of PLO factions and independen­t personalit­ies.

On Monday, the PFLP called on Fatah to abandon the idea of forming a new government and to focus its efforts instead on achieving “national unity” among the Palestinia­ns. The group said that the formation of the government would intensify the crisis in the Palestinia­n arena and “undermine Palestinia­n efforts to confront challenges and threats.”

Majed al-Fetyani, a senior Fatah official, said that his faction has concluded consultati­ons with various Palestinia­n factions and figures regarding the establishm­ent of a new government.

Hamdallah said on Monday that intensive consultati­ons were underway to form a government whose main task would be to end the Hamas-Fatah rift.

Palestinia­n sources said it was still unclear who would head the new PA government. The list of names of several senior Fatah officials who have been mentioned as potential candidates to replace Hamdallah is not final, the sources said. Among the candidates whose names are being mentioned are Mohammed Shtayyeh, Azzam al-Ahmed, Jibril Rajoub and Saeb Erekat.

A PA official in Ramallah said that Abbas is expected to announce the new prime minister in the coming days.

In a related developmen­t, the Qatari online newspaper Al-Khaleej Online said that some Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia and Egypt, were interferin­g in the consultati­ons over the formation of a new PA government. Abbas wants such a government to win the backing of Arabs, Israel and the internatio­nal community, the newspaper quoted unnamed senior Palestinia­n officials as saying.

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