Home | About Us | Whats NewArchive | Contact Us   Monday
Monday, March 24, 2008

Latest News
National
International
Local News
Sports
Editorials
Columns
Letters
Maxim
Business
Stocks
Forex & Gold
Weather
Nation Plus
On Campus
S+
Focus On UK
Focus On USA
About The Nation
Subscriptions
Advertise
Feedback
Help
Nawaiwaqt | Nida-i-Millat | Family Magazine | Phool  
Latest Headlines
Rival Palestinian factions agree to talk

SANAA (AFP) - Rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah reached a Yemeni-brokered deal on Sunday to open their first direct talks since the Islamists’ bloody seizure of the Gaza Strip nine months ago. 
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said he was ready to host the dialogue from early April but warned that negotiations to reach a detailed reconciliation accord would be “difficult”. The so-called Sanaa Declaration was signed by Fatah parliamentary leader Azzam al-Ahmed and Hamas number two Mussa Abu Marzuk. 
It aims to end the bitter standoff between the long-time rivals since Hamas drove forces loyal to the Fatah party of Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas out of Gaza in a week of deadly street battles last June. The plan, which calls for a return to the status quo that existed before Hamas’ seizure of the impoverished territory, had looked doomed just days ago. 
“The two movements Hamas and Fatah have agreed to accept the Yemeni initiative as a framework for dialogue between the two movements and a return of the Palestinian situation to what it was before the events in Gaza,” the declaration said. The text, read to journalists by Yemeni Foreign Minister Abu Bakr al-Kurbi, said the dialogue also aimed to “reconfirm the unity of the Palestinian homeland in terms of its land, people and the Palestinian Authority.” As well as the restoration of the national unity government in power before the Hamas takeover and the re-establishment of the Palestinian leadership’s authority over Gaza, the Yemeni initiative also provides for early elections. “The agreement will begin to help build trust between Fatah and Hamas and the rest of the Palestinian factions,” said Saleh, adding that the deal would be discussed at the upcoming Arab summit. 
“What was signed here today will be included in the agenda of the Arab League meeting in Damascus. God willing, it will become an Arab initiative rather than a Yemeni one,” said the president. There was no immediate comment from Abbas’ administration, whose power base remains limited to the occupied West Bank. In Gaza City, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri confirmed the agreement but stressed it was only a framework. “That means it is a framework for dialogue and not a set of preconditions for implementation. The dialogue will focus on Palestinian situation, and not only in Gaza,” he told AFP. 
The humanitarian situation in Gaza has become increasingly precarious because of a punishing Israeli blockade on the tiny enclave of 1.5 million people sandwiched between Israel, Egypt and the Mediterranean Sea. 
Israel has been negotiating only with the Abbas administration since peace talks were revived at a US conference in late November, although they have made little headway since. 
But it refuses to engage in talks with Hamas, which is pledged to the destruction of the Jewish state and is branded a terrorist group by Israel and the West. 
















© Copyright 2004 - Nawaiwaqt Group of News Papers - All rights reserved.
Designed & Developed by E-Group, Pakistan.