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Abbas ready to quit over Israel talks

by ALJ
Mahmoud Abbas says he is ready to hold peace talks with Israel, but is warning that he might resign his post if the Palestinian parliament, to be elected on 25 January, opposes his platform.
The Palestinian president said talks with Ehud Olmert, Israel's acting prime minister, should be held as soon as possible.

"I am ready to meet him as soon as possible and I hope to sit round the negotiating table immediately," Abbas said in Ram Allah on Wednesday.

"The only way we can forge peace is through negotiations and not through killings, assassinations, attacks and unilateral measures."

However, Hamas, which has spearheaded the resistance against Israel in recent years, is expected to make a strong challenge to Abbas' ruling Fatah party and earn a place in the next government.

A coalition government involving Hamas could make it difficult for Israel and the Palestinians to restart long-frozen peace efforts.

"If I feel that I can't fulfil this programme ... then the seat is not my ultimate ambition," Abbas said, referring to his post as Palestinian president.

Abbas's comments came after Olmert said on Tuesday he hoped to resume negotiations with the Palestinian leadership after Israel's general election on 28 March.

Ariel Sharon, the prime minister of Israel, who has been in a coma since suffering a brain haemorrhage two weeks ago, and Abbas met twice last year.

The boycott

However, since a heated summit in June, the Israeli leader had declined to meet the Palestinian Authority president.

Sharon boycotted Yasser Arafat, Abbas's predecessor who died in November 2004, and also withdrew troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip last summer on a unilateral basis.

Olmert has said there could be no progress on the peace process if Hamas, the Islamist resistance group, entered a Palestinian government after elections in the West Bank and Gaza next Wednesday.

Activists detained

Meanwhile, Israeli police detained seven Palestinian activists campaigning in Arab East Jerusalem for next week's parliamentary election, accusing them of belonging to an outlawed group.

Shmuel Ben-Ruby, a spokesman for Jerusalem police, said the activists were taken for questioning while they were trying to convene a news conference at a hotel.

Among those in custody was the Jerusalem head of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a group outlawed by Israel for involvement in attacks against its civilians during a more than five-year Palestinian uprising, police said.

Upcoming elections

Police have previously arrested several members of Hamas for campaigning in Jerusalem, a city Israel regards as its capital, but which Palestinians also see as theirs.

Mickey Rosenfeld, a spokesman for national police, said other groups outlawed by Israel, such as the Popular Front, would also be stopped from campaigning in East Jerusalem.

It appeared to be the largest number of Palestinians held in the city for campaigning since the Israeli government agreed on Sunday to approve voting on 25 January in East Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, Abbas reiterated his demand that armed Palestinian groups give up their weapons and submit to the security forces, a demand that has been uniformly ignored in chaotic Palestinian areas. Abbas said the 11 parties participating in the election had a responsibility to disarm.

"It is not their right to participate in political life and maintain militias," he said. "There should be no one armed beyond the law."

Abbas promised that the elections would be clean and honest and warned gunmen not to bring arms to polling stations.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/35840159-98D3-4576-968D-96E3144B19BD.htm
by Haaretz (reposted)
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas said Wednesday he might resign his office if the government elected in Jan. 25 parliamentary elections opposes his platform, which includes peaceful negotiations with Israel.

The militant Hamas group, which calls for the destruction of Israel and has carried out scores of deadly attacks against Israel in recent years, was expected to post a strong challenge to Abbas' ruling Fatah Party in the election and earn a spot in the next government.

Abbas' Fatah movement and Hamas both agreed Wednesday not to bring weapons to polling stations in a bid to assure a smooth parliamentary vote, leaders said.

A coalition government with Hamas would make it difficult for the two sides to restart long-frozen peace efforts. "If I feel that I can't fulfill this program ... then the seat is not my ultimate ambition," Abbas said, referring to his post as Palestinian leader. However, he held out hope that regardless of the election results, he would be able to pursue his peace plans. "Who knows, Hamas may change its policy," Abbas said.

Abbas spoke a day after Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said that following the completion of upcoming Palestinian and Israeli elections he hoped to begin negotiations with Abbas that would lead to "a permanent peace agreement between us and the Palestinians." Abbas enthusiastically welcomed the overture.

"We will not hesitate to get into such a negotiation," Abbas said. "The way to peace is to sit together at the negotiation table, not the path of killings and unilateral actions."

More
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/672006.html
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