Kuwait Times

Hamas, Fatah reconcilia­tion?

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GAZA: For three days it was all smiles as the Palestinia­n prime minister held talks in Gaza with Hamas but as the symbolic visit draws to a close the real work for reconcilia­tion is just beginning. The two sides will meet again for in-depth negotiatio­ns next week. After a decade of division, are there reasons to believe the rival Palestinia­n factions might finally come together?

What happened?

On Monday, Palestinia­n Authority Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah arrived in Gaza for the first time since 2015, describing it as a “historic” moment. He met with the leaders of Hamas Ismail Haniya, as well with the head of Egyptian intelligen­ce, while also convening his cabinet in Gaza for the first time in nearly three years. Hamas has ruled the territory since 2007, when it seized it from the PA in a near civil war and multiple previous reconcilia­tion attempts have failed. But after Egyptian mediation, last month the Islamists of Hamas agreed to hand over civil power to the internatio­nally recognised PA, which is based in the West Bank.

What is at stake?

The most immediate issue is the suffering of the two million Gazans, who have faced three devastatin­g wars with Israel since 2008, as well as crippling blockades by both Israel and Egypt. They suffer from desperate shortages of electricit­y and high unemployme­nt. The decadelong division has also been a key obstacle to peace talks with Israel. Gaza and the West Bank are supposed to form a future independen­t state but internatio­nally recognized president Mahmud Abbas, long the negotiatin­g partner for Israel, has been undermined by Hamas’a control of Gaza. “The division cripples the Palestinia­ns from being able to move forward in a constructi­ve manner in achieving the goal of returning back to negotiatio­ns and implementi­ng a two-state solution,” UN Middle East envoy Nickolay Mladenov said.

Reasons for belief?

Past failures have inevitably sparked skepticism about the latest reconcilia­tion effort. But on Monday, Hamdallah’s ministers took the keys to government offices in Gaza. Nour Odeh, a political analyst based in the West Bank, contrasted this with the previous reconcilia­tion attempt in 2014, when ministers of a unity government were often not allowed to leave their hotels by Hamas.”This is the first time the ministers of this government have assumed their roles in their own ministries. It is a completely different dynamic on the ground,” she said. “These things are important-they help to create an atmosphere that is a snowball that can continue rolling.” Palestinia­n media were broadly supportive of the reconcilia­tion effort, although few concrete measures were publicly announced.

What now?

If this week’s visit was about symbolism, next week the details begin. The two sides will meet in Cairo on Tuesday to start in-depth negotiatio­ns that could take months. A key stumbling block is control of security in Gaza. Hamas has an armed wing with an estimated 25,000 members and is loath to give up control. Senior Hamas officials have already said it is out of the question, but Abbas has insisted the Palestinia­n Authority must have full control. Hamas could not “copy or clone Hezbollah’s experience in Lebanon,” he warned on Monday, referring to a situation where an independen­t armed group exerts major influence on national politics. — AFP

 ??  ?? GAZA: Senior Hamas official Ismail Haniyeh (center right) meets with Egyptian Intelligen­ce Minister Khalid Fawzi at his office in Gaza City. — AFP
GAZA: Senior Hamas official Ismail Haniyeh (center right) meets with Egyptian Intelligen­ce Minister Khalid Fawzi at his office in Gaza City. — AFP

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