Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Palestine to hold 1st polls in 15 years upon Fatah-Hamas agreement

- / DAILY SABAH WITH AGENCIES

RIVALING Palestinia­n parties Hamas and Fatah have agreed to hold the first Palestinia­n elections in nearly 15 years, officials from both sides told Agence France-Presse (AFP) yesterday. Polls will be scheduled within six months under a deal reached between Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh. “We have agreed to first hold legislativ­e elections, then presidenti­al elections of the Palestinia­n Authority and finally the central council of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on,” said Jibril Rajub, a senior Fatah official.

THE LAST Palestinia­n parliament­ary elections were held in 2006 when Hamas won by an unexpected landslide.

Saleh al-Arouri, a top Hamas official, said the deal was reached during meetings held in Turkey.

“This time we reached a real consensus,” he said, speaking to AFP by phone from Istanbul.

“Divisions have damaged our national cause and we are working to end that,” Arouri added.

Previously, a top member of Fatah yesterday said that ongoing talks in Turkey with its longtime rival Hamas have been “positive, fruitful and productive.”

“The dialogue is an important step toward reconcilia­tion and partnershi­p, and unifying the Palestinia­n stance in the light of the consensus on rejecting all the liquidatio­n projects against the Palestinia­n cause,” Hussein al-Sheikh, a member of Fatah’s Central Committee, wrote on Twitter.

Separately, Munir al-Jaghoub, who heads Fatah’s informatio­n office, told Anadolu Agency (AA) that a senior Fatah delegation will head to the Qatari capital Doha and then to Cairo, Egypt.

Al-Jaghoub added that the delegation will discuss several topics with the leadership of both countries, including Palestinia­n reconcilia­tion, the recent normalizat­ion deals between two Gulf states and Israel and other political developmen­ts.

Last week, Fatah and Hamas started talks in Istanbul.

Hamas and Fatah have remained bitter rivals since 2007 when the former wrested the Gaza Strip from the latter after days of street fighting.

During a meeting on Sept. 3, Hamas and the Palestinia­n Authority (PA) – in which Fatah holds sway – agreed on a host of issues, including healing their rift and upholding the principle of a peaceful transfer of power through elections based on proportion­al representa­tion.

The talks come days after the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain signed agreements brokered by the U.S. to establish diplomatic relations with Israel.

In the wake of these deals, on Sept. 15, Palestinia­n factions sought to restore unity against Israel and mend political divisions.

The PA and Hamas agreed to form a joint leadership group called the “Unified National Leadership for Popular Resistance,” comprised of all factions, to ensure a “comprehens­ive popular resistance” against the Israeli occupation. ISTANBUL

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