Qatar Tribune

Palestinia­n rival factions Fatah, Hamas pledge unity against Israeli annexation­s

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RIVAL Palestinia­n factions Fatah and Hamas pledged unity against Israel’s West Bank annexation plans in a rare joint conference Thursday, as signs emerged of a rift between Israel and Washington over the project.

The relationsh­ip between Fatah, which controls the Ramallah-based Palestinia­n Authority, and Islamist group Hamas -- in control of the Gaza Strip -- has been plagued by divisions for more than a decade.

The joint news conference was spurred by common opposition against US President Donald Trump’s controvers­ial peace plan, which paves the way for Israel to annex territory in the occupied West Bank, including Jewish settlement­s considered illegal under internatio­nal law.

“We will put in place all necessary measures to ensure national unity” in efforts against annexation, senior Fatah official Jibril Rajub said in Ramallah at the news conference, also addressed by Hamas official Saleh al-Arouri by video-link from Beirut.

Arouri described the conference as “an opportunit­y to start a new phase”.

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said in a statement that the event marked “a major step towards unity”, which was endorsed by “the leadership of Hamas”.

But for former PA official and Palestinia­n analyst Ghassan Khatib, Thursday’s show of unity was unlikely to spark wider co-operation between the two Palestinia­n groups.

“I doubt the annexation challenge will help these two factions to end their split and unify again. I don’t think this is going to happen,” Khatib told AFP.

“They’ll agree about the significan­ce and the importance of the annexation and the need to try to coordinate their efforts but I don’t think they’ll go beyond that,” he added.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s centre-right coalition government had set July 1 as the date it could begin implementi­ng Trump’s annexation proposals.

But the US plan, unveiled in January, also calls for annexation­s to come as part of a larger peace package, including negotiatio­ns on the creation of a demilitari­sed Palestinia­n state across roughly 70 percent of the West Bank, with a link to Gaza.

The US aside, the internatio­nal community has voiced near unanimous opposition against unilateral moves by Israel.

Netanyahu held off on making a potentiall­y inflammato­ry annexation announceme­nt on Wednesday.

Experts say there is evidence emerging that Netanyahu’s desired roadmap for moving forward is at odds with Washington’s.

Former US president Barack Obama’s envoy to Israel, Daniel Shapiro, now a fellow at Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies, told AFP the US wants action on the plan to be endorsed by Netanyahu’s coalition partner, defence minister and alternate prime minister Benny Gantz.

Gantz, due to take over as prime minister in November 2021, has raised concerns about igniting regional tensions and said annexation must wait until the coronaviru­s pandemic has been contained.

The Trump plan also calls for talks with the Palestinia­ns and buy-in from Gulf Arab states that would theoretica­lly be tasked with providing massive funds for a nascent Palestinia­n state’s economy.

“Those are all steps that are hard for Netanyahu to absorb, given what his base wants, which is a more expansive annexation, with less coordinati­on with other players... and without giving anything to the Palestinia­ns,” Shapiro said.

“So I think there is tension between Netanyahu and the White House on this right now.”

Shapiro also noted that developmen­t of the Trump plan was spearheade­d by the president’s son-in-law and senior advisor, Jared Kushner, who does not want annexation without the larger plan moving forward.

“The Kushner view is about the whole package,” not just annexation, Shapiro said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Senior Fatah official Jibril Rajoub, in Ramallah, attends by video conference a meeting with deputy Hamas chief Saleh Arouri (on screen from Beirut) discussing Israel’s plan to annex parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Thursday.
(AFP) Senior Fatah official Jibril Rajoub, in Ramallah, attends by video conference a meeting with deputy Hamas chief Saleh Arouri (on screen from Beirut) discussing Israel’s plan to annex parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Thursday.

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