‘That’s not how someone striving for peace behaves,’ charges prime minister
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded
Thursday to news of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and
Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal meeting in Cairo for reconciliation talks by
reiterating his accusation that Abbas is not acting like a partner for
peace.
The PA president and the leader of Hamas held talks Wednesday in a bid to leverage some recent goodwill between their rival factions and reach a long-elusive reconciliation agreement, a senior Palestinian official said.
“Abbas embraced the head of a terrorist
organization that called, only a month ago, for wiping Israel off the
map,” Netanyahu said. “That’s not how someone striving for peace
behaves.”
The meetings between Abbas and Mashaal marked
the latest attempt by the rival Palestinian leaders to bridge the gap
between their groups. But many obstacles remain before the sides can
settle their differences, chief among them how to deal with Israel.
Several rounds of reconciliation talks over
recent years focused on finding ways to share power have failed to yield
results, and the official, speaking before the talks, said no immediate
breakthrough was expected in the meetings Wednesday in Cairo. Hamas
also is not ready since it will hold internal elections to replace
Mashaal, the official said.
The official said that Abbas will call upon
all Palestinian factions to hold a larger meeting in Cairo at a later
date to discuss reconciliation.
The two Palestinian groups have been at odds
since the Islamic militant Hamas overran Gaza in 2007, ousting forces
from Abbas’s Fatah. Since then, Abbas has ruled in the West Bank, and
Hamas has held sway in Gaza.
While past efforts to end the split have
failed, the two sides have tried to make a show of unity since Hamas’s
fierce battle with Israel in November and Fatah’s subsequent recognition
bid at the United Nations.
Earlier in the day, Abbas and Mashaal held
talks individually with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi. Morsi hails
from the Muslim Brotherhood, the fundamentalist Islamist group that is
the parent organization of Hamas.
In 2011, Mashaal and Abbas signed a
reconciliation agreement, but it was not implemented. According to the
deal and subsequent round of talks held in Qatar, the two factions would
form a national coalition government of independents to oversee
legislative and presidential elections.
The new talks are taking place in a slightly different atmosphere, however, following recent gains by both factions.
Abbas has enjoyed a boost in his status since
he led the Palestinians’ successful bid to upgrade their status at the
United Nations to a nonmember observer state.
Hamas, meanwhile, has gained new support among
Palestinians following eight days of fighting with Israel in November,
during which Israel pounded tgerror targets in the seaside strip from
the air and sea, while Palestinian terrorists fired 1,500 rockets at
Israel and for the first time launched rockets toward Jerusalem and Tel
Aviv.
Following the fighting, Fatah allowed Hamas to
hold its first rally in the West Bank since the 2007 split. Hamas
returned the favor by allowing Fatah to stage its own rally in Gaza, its
first since the Hamas takeover.
Meanwhile, Hatnua party leader Tzipi Livni
responded to Netanyahu’s words with a suggestion that instead
of chastising Abbas, Israel should demand that any future agreement
between Fatah and Hamas include recognition of the State of Israel and
an end to terrorist activities.
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