|
|
Hamas Sounds Optimism for İnter-Palestinian Talks |
Palestine - 22.10.2009, 22:50:56 |
|
|
|
|
The deputy head of Hamas political bureau, Moussa Abu Marzouq, says the Islamic Resistance Movement is awaiting
The deputy head of Hamas political bureau, Moussa Abu Marzouq, says the Islamic Resistance Movement is awaiting an invitation by Cairo to discuss a reconciliation pact with the rival Fatah party.
"Hamas wants to open the new reconciliation paper to match it with what was previously agreed upon. The Movement wants real reconciliation so as not to repeat previous experiences which led to more division in the Palestinian arena," Abu Marzouq told al-Aqsa television station on Wednesday.
The Hamas official also dismissed the allegations that attempts for inter-Palestinian reconciliation deal have fallen short. He blamed 'certain parties' for endeavors to strain the relationship between Egyptian authorities and Hamas officials.
Abu Marzouq underscored that Egypt never rebuked Hamas for its position towards the reconciliation pact, contradicting some media reports.
Hamas and Fatah have long been wrangling with each other over substantial discords which have caused real bottlenecks to mend fences and repair the internal Palestinian divisions. Egypt has, meanwhile, been struggling for months to get opponent Palestinian factions to sign a reconciliation deal. The latest Cairo proposal aims to lay the groundwork for new presidential and legislative elections next summer.
Ever since Hamas won an outright majority in 2006 Palestinian legislative elections, the two factions have pursued bitter rivalry featuring sporadic fighting and tit-for-tat arrests. Most of the fighting has been provoked by Fatah, which remains secular and heavily backed and funded by the US, the primary Israeli sponsor.
Mutual hostility between the two factions boiled over in the summer of 2007, when Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip from the Fatah faction.
Since then, Hamas has governed the Gaza Strip, while Fatah has continued to control the West Bank from Ramallah. Further complicating the situation, Israel and Egypt, with the blessings of the Palestinian Authority, have both sealed their borders with the Gaza Strip, effectively cutting off the coastal enclave from the rest of the world.
MP/MB
isra haber
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Turkish Party Recasts Image
The leader of Turkey's main secularist opposition is tearing up the rule book of the party that Ataturk built, as he tries to build a credible alternative to the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Marc CHAMPION |
|
|
America: No Stranger to Genocidal War Crimes
“To fight and kill is worth three months without sex.
Afeef KHAN |
|
|
Who Educates Who?
I can list my objections to modern education:
1) The term “education” is used incorrectly in terms of both its definition and its goals.
Ali BULAÇ |
|
|
Iran, Lebanon Share History of Suppor
The recent visit of the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to Lebanon has constituted a particularly bright episode of a long history of ties between Iran and Lebanon over the last few centuries.
Yusuf FERNANDEZ |
|
|
The Uncertain Fate of South Sudan
With a key referendum aimed at determining the fate of south Sudan looming on the horizon, President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has warned the nation that the vote could have dangerous consequences.
Hasan HANİZADEH |
|
|
Nasrallah: Hizbullah Has the Right to Possess Any Weapon
In the of God Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
Hasan NASRALLAH |
|
|
Chomsky: What's at Stake İn the Issue of Iran
In an interview with the German publication, Freitag, Noam Chomsky talks about U.
Noam CHOMSKY |
|
|
Breaking the Middle East Impasse
Pretoria, South Africa – A new conventional wisdom is rapidly taking shape that the United States can resolve the 130-year-old conflict in Palestine by advancing its own peace plan.
Ali ABUNİMAH |
|
|
Netanyahu Versus Hamas
It should be amply clear by now that the current Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu combines many of the characters that would make any human being detestable if not evil.
Khalid AMAYREH |
|
|
Turkey Seizes İts Moment
The assessment by veteran Israeli human-rights and political campaigner Uri Avnery of the recent Israel-Turkey diplomatic and political row - that "the relationship between Turkey and Israel will probably return to normal, if not to its former degree of warmth" - seems sensible and daring.
Ramzy BAROUD |
|
|
The New Huthi Game
Abdul Malik al-Huthi's third initiative towards the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia can only be described as a new game and one of the ongoing Huthi ploys against Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
Tarık El-HOMAYED |
|
|
Israel Has No Legitimacy, Period
Recent statements by Palestinian Islamic leader Professor Aziz Duweik about the possibility of amending or even abandoning some clauses in Hamas’s charter have elicited a plethora of reactions in occupied Palestine and abroad.
Khalid AMAYREH |
|
|
Who İs There to Seriously Dialogue With?
On November 4, 2009, the 30th anniversary of the student takeover of the American Embassy in Tehran, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave a speech which is being much discussed in Washington DC.
Franklin LAMB |
|
|
Terrorism: Hizballah's Brand İs Tarnished
A famous Hizbullah marching song, "Hizbullah ya ayuni" (Hizbullah - my eyes), contains the following verse: "And today through the blood of the brave, the merciful creator has given us victory, and the whole world and all people have begun to speak of our glory.
Jonathan SPYER |
|
|
Another Farcical Show
One doesn’t have to be a prophet to predict the outcome, or more correctly failure, of the three-way meeting between President Obama, the Israeli premier Benyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (whose term in office expired in January 2009), which took place in New York on Tuesday.
Halid AMAYREH |
|
|
Netanyahu's "brilliant" Peace Plan
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu proposed a peace plan so ingenious it is a wonder that for six decades of bloodshed no one thought of it.
Ali ABUNİMAH |
|
|
Quo Vadis, Barack Obama…?
Obama is coming home after two difficult summits, Russia and the G-8, to a domestic agenda not likely to yield better results.
Ben TAN0SBORN |
|
| more analyses » |
|
|
|