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Can Hamas and Fatah ever agree on how to negotiate with Israel?

by UK Independent (reposted)
By Donald Macintre, Jerusalem Correspondent


Why is this question suddenly relevant?

Because Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian President, has just issued an ultimatum to Hamas designed to force them to do just that. He has given them until Sunday to agree a document which would mean abandoning their doctrinal commitment to the elimination of Israel and join Fatah in accepting the principle of a two-state solution, with Israel and a Palestinian state living side by side along the 1967 pre-occupation borders. If they refuse, he will put the document to a referendum. If they were to accept now - or after a Palestinian referendum - it could mean a common negotiating stance for the Palestinians in talks with Israel, and would thus remove the ideological conflict between the two groups which - among other things - stopped the formation of the coalition government that Hamas said it wanted after winning the Palestinian parliamentary elections in January.

Don't the signs point more to a civil war than to the two sides working together?

Ten Palestinians have been killed in vicious but sporadic infighting between armed groups this month. And there is a big power struggle between the - elected - Hamas cabinet and the - also elected - president over which should control the 70,000-strong security forces. While Mr Abbas is trying to maintain overall control of security, the Interior Minister, Said Syam, has formed--and deployed - a 3,000-strong "implementation force" - many of whose members were militants in Hamas's Izzedin al-Qassam brigades - with the intention of giving them regular police uniforms and moving them into Gaza police stations to "support" the existing Fatah-dominated police force.

While this is in tune with Hamas's commitment - on which it in part fought the election - to a much needed restoration of law and order, it happened in defiance of a veto by Mr Abbas and is an obvious source of tension between the two groups. Other volatile ingredients are the temptation of disgruntled members of armed groups linked to Fatah to destabilise the Hamas government; bitter resentment within Hamas of some leading Palestinian security chiefs who under Yasser Arafat in the 1990s imprisoned, and according to Hamas, in some cases tortured their activists; and the increasing poverty of security personnel now in their third month without a salary because of the international and Israeli boycott of the Hamas-led PA.

So far, the large majority of the 1.3 million Palestinians in Gaza, where tensions are highest, have shown no interest whatever in fighting an armed conflict, and the incidents, while frequent and dangerous - a Jordanian embassy employee was killed in crossfire as he drove through Gaza City - have been relatively isolated

Also, both Mr Abbas and Hamas's Ismail Haniyeh, the Palestinian Prime Minister, have repeatedly declared that civil war is off the agenda. That said, several Palestinian commentators believe Mr Abbas's proposal for political unity provides the best chance of averting the civil war they fear. "Abu Mazen understands more than anybody else that the alternative to the dialogue is a civil war," wrote the respected Hani El Masri in El Ayyam newspaper last week.

What document does Mr Abbas want Hamas to agree?

Mr Abbas has deliberately made the basis of his dialogue/referendum proposal a joint document drawn up in the Israeli prison of Hadarim by Marwan Barghouti, the jailed "young guard" Fatah leader and his one-time rival for the presidency, and a group of Hamas prisoners led by Sheikh Abdul Khaleq al-Natsheh. The document stops short of explicitly meeting the international demands for recognition of Israel and renunciation of all violence; but, crucially for Hamas, it makes both possible by backing the idea of a "final" agreement on two-state lines. It also proposes a "national unity government" between the two factions. The document matters because prisoners enjoy a special honour and influence within their own factions and beyond.

Reaction within Hamas has been mixed; and not for the first time contradictory statements have been made by some of its leading figures. Immediately after Mr Abbas's speech on Thursday, Dr Aziz Dweik, speaker of the parliament and a leading West Bank figure in Hamas, said the document was a good basis for dialogue and praised the idea of a referendum. But Mushir al-Masri, a prominent Hamas parliamentarian in Gaza, said the plan was a "coup against the democratic choice of the Palestinian people" (of Hamas over Fatah.) There also signs of geographical difference - between Gaza and the West Bank and the occupied territories and the - usually harder line - exiled leadership in Damascus.

More
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article621796.ece
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