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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh agreed on Monday that their parties would form a coalition government. (AP file)
PA's Haniyeh says he will be prime minister in coalition government with Fatah
Britain's Blair meets Palestinian president in push for renewed peace effort
Hamas, Abbas agree to talk about forming unity government
Palestinian president Abbas meets Hamas' Haniyeh over captured Israeli soldier
Only lowest-paid Palestinian public workers to get partial salaries
Hamas withdraws its militia as it grapples with Abbas' ultimatum
Competing Palestinian security forces face off in Hamas-Abbas clash
Livni: aid plan for Palestinians "acceptable" if funds won't reach Hamas
Caught in standoff between Hamas and the West, Palestinians see no way out

 
Abbas says agreement reached on Fatah-Hamas coalition government
By Associated Press  September 11, 2006
 
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh agreed on Monday that their moderate Fatah and militant Hamas parties would form a coalition government -- a move the Palestinians hope would ease crippling international sanctions.

There were no immediate details on the provisions of the developing coalition agreement, but both sides said it was based on a proposal that many have interpreted to imply recognition of Israel.

The West and Israel have been withholding hundreds of millions of dollars from the Hamas-led government, which swept January parliamentary elections, because of the group's refusal to disarm, recognize Israel and accept existing peace agreements.

Hamas and Fatah have been negotiating for months to form such a coalition. Abbas interrupted a meeting with Haniyeh on Monday to invite Palestinian media to hear his announcement.

"The continuous efforts to form a national unity government have ended successfully with the announcement of a political program for this government," Abbas told Palestinian television and the official WAFA news agency. "Efforts in the next few days will continue to complete the formation of the national unity government."

"The national interest requires that all our people unite to head in stable steps so we can achieve victory by establishing our independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital," Abbas added.

Ismail Haniyeh, who said earlier in the day that he would retain his post under such a government, confirmed that the two parties planned to rule together.

"I bring good news to the Palestinian people and I feel proud and content that at this important moment we establish a national coalition government," Haniyeh said.

Palestinian lawmaker Saeb Erekat, who is close to Abbas, said final details had to be ironed out. Those details will help to decide whether the new coalition, if formed, wins the recognition the international community has denied the Hamas-only government.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said Israel hoped any future Palestinian government would accept the three international demands, and facilitate the release of an Israeli soldier captured by Hamas-linked militants more than two months ago.

"If that were to happen, we would have a re-energized peace process and new momentum in the Israeli-Palestinian dialogue," Regev said.

Hamas officials said the agreement did not amount to direct recognition of Israel. But elements of the platform -- including acceptance of an Arab plan for a comprehensive Middle East peace agreement -- suggest recognition of the Jewish state.

A spokesman for British Prime Minister Tony Blair, speaking in Beirut, said the British leader regarded the Palestinian leaders' announcement as "potentially, a hugely significant statement." Blair, who arrived in the region Saturday night for talks with leaders, had met with Abbas on Sunday, but boycotted the Hamas-led government.

There was no immediate comment from the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem.

The agreement to join forces indicates Hamas has buckled under crushing sanctions imposed to pressure it to moderate its anti-Israel ideology.

Initially, Palestinians held the West and Israel to blame for their misfortune, but in recent weeks, began directing that criticism at the Hamas-led government. Tens of thousands of civil servants launched an open-ended strike last week to protest the government's failure to pay them for the past six months.

Western aid and Israeli transfer payments, now withheld, had been the main source of government salaries before Hamas took power. Government salaries provide for one-third of the Palestinian people, and the payment of erratic, small stipends has done little to alleviate the impoverishment of many Palestinians.

Both Abbas and Haniyeh urged workers to return to their jobs.

Ziad Abu Amr, an independent lawmaker who participated in the Abbas-Haniyeh meeting, said he expected the government would be formed "very quickly because the president and prime minister are eager to end the internal and external crisis that the Palestinian people are facing."

The proposal that would form the basis of the coalition's political program calls for a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, acceptance of U.N. resolutions calling for a territorial settlement, and an end to violence inside the borders of sovereign Israel. It also calls for acceptance of an Arab initiative that would lead to a comprehensive settlement of the Mideast conflict.

Israel has rejected the plan, which would require a full Israeli withdrawal from territories captured in the 1967 Mideast war.


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