Palestinian factions talk amid US threat
ramallah — Leading Palestinian political factions are to gather on Tuesday in Cairo to push ahead with reconciliation efforts, despite fundamental disputes ahead of a key December 1 deadline.
The talks come as Palestinians face rising tensions with the United States over the threatened closure of their office in Washington.
Tensions between the two largest Palestinian groups — Fatah and Hamas — have reemerged since they signed a reconciliation deal last month, but delegates hope the meeting of 13 factions could push the bid ahead.
Fatah, led by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, has been at loggerheads with Hamas since the Palestinian movement seized control of Gaza in 2007.
But on October 12, the two parties signed an Egyptian-brokered deal which is meant to see Hamas hand back civilian power to Abbas’s Palestinian Authority (PA) government, which is based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, by December 1.
In a crucial first step, Hamas stuck to a November 1 deadline to hand over the border crossings between Gaza and Egypt and Israel.
However, since that date, progress has appeared to stall, with Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah suggesting the PA needed full security control of Gaza before further steps could be taken.
Hamas rejected that, accusing Hamdallah of seeking to change the terms of the agreement.
Palestinians and international powers hope an implemented reconciliation deal could help ease the suffering of Gaza’s two million residents, who suffer from high rates of poverty and unemployment.
Multiple previous reconciliation attempts have failed.
The Cairo talks come amid a rise in US-Palestinian tensions over a threatened closure of the office in Washington of the Palestine Libera- tion Organisation (PLO), which the international community recognises as representing all Palestinians.
The threatened closure was apparently over a Palestinian suggestion of taking the issue of Israeli settlements on occupied land to the International Criminal Court.
But an analyst said these tensions were not likely to influence discussions in Cairo.
“I don’t think the tensions between the PA and Washington will affect the reconciliation process,” Palestinian political analyst George Giacaman said.
“The problems that the PA is facing regarding Gaza are of a different nature: how will they cope with the financial and humanitarian situation in Gaza, how will they control the groups that Hamas struggled to control until now?”
Tuesday’s meeting brings together 13 factions, and analysts expect them all to back reconciliation.
Wasel Abu Yousef, a senior PLO official, said the talks could last until Thursday, with all factions expected to be in attendance. “I think this meeting will be a huge step towards the removal of all the obstacles to reconciliation, which is supported by everyone,” he said.
The topics to be discussed are well known — societal reconciliation, security, forming a potential unity government, elections, and whether Hamas could eventually join the PLO. But the extent to which each of them will be discussed matters.
The most controversial issue remains security — meaning the future of Hamas’s military wing.
Bassem Naim, a top Hamas official, said it was impossible for them to consider giving up their weapons. He argued that in the West Bank where Abbas’s government is meant to have partial self rule, the Israeli army in reality operates with impunity — including in areas nominally under full Palestinian control.