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Palestinian youths attend a Hamas rally in Gaza City, Friday, Jan. 6, 2006, alongside a photo of the founder of Hamas, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin. (AP)
Mahmoud Abbas says he received U.S. assurances on Palestinian vote in Jerusalem
Police say Palestinians will be allowed to campaign in east Jerusalem
Hundreds of Palestinians stream unchecked into Egypt, kill two Egyptian soldiers
As election campaign begins, Hamas insists vote must be held on schedule
For first time, Abbas prefers postponing Palestinian parliament poll
Pressure mounts for Palestinian leader to delay upcoming parliamentary elections
Armed gangs turn "Palestinian Authority" into impotent oxymoron
Islamic militants reject appeal for calm from Palestinian leader
Views: Yasser Abbas

 
Israeli Cabinet expected to let Hamas run, Palestinians vote in east Jerusalem
By Israel Insider staff and partners  January 11, 2006
 
Israel's Cabinet will vote next week on whether to allow Palestinians to vote in Jerusalem during Palestinian parliamentary elections, acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said. Approval is expected.

Olmert told U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in a phone conversation Tuesday that Cabinet would vote on the matter at its weekly meeting on Sunday, according to a statement from Olmert's office. Rice called Olmert for an update on the condition of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who remains hospitalized after a massive stroke.

If the Cabinet approves the plan, it would resolve a dispute that threatened to derail the Jan. 25 election.

Israel had threatened to prevent the voting in Jerusalem, which had been allowed in previous elections, because of the presence on the ballot of Hamas, a terrorist group pledged to the destruction of Israel. A Cabinet decision to allow the voting to go forward would be contingent on Hamas not participating, Olmert's statement said.

Israeli officials gave conflicting accounts as to whether the proposal would pass.

Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said Tuesday that Israel would allow Jerusalem voting along the same lines as previous Palestinian elections, when it permitted some residents to cast absentee ballots in local post offices. The remainder of voters cast ballots in outlying Judean and Samarian suburbs.

"Israel's policy regarding elections in east Jerusalem will stay like it was," Mofaz told reporters while on a tour near Jerusalem. The arrangements were reached under interim peace agreements in the mid-1990s.

But Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said there would be no voting in Jerusalem.

"Israel is of the opinion - and it was an opinion widespread when Prime Minister Sharon was still functioning as a decision-maker - that under the present circumstances residents of east Jerusalem are not to be allowed to vote in Jerusalem itself but only in the adjoining (Judean and Samarian) villages," he said.

The dispute reflects internal Israeli politics. Shalom is in Likud, the hard-line party Sharon left to set up his centrist Kadima, which Mofaz joined. Israel's parliamentary elections are March 28.

Since Kadima holds a majority in the Cabinet, the proposal is likely to pass.

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said he had not heard anything official from the Israelis. "If this is the case, I welcome this position of the Israeli government," he said.

The status of Jerusalem is one of the most sensitive issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israel claims all of Jerusalem as its capital. The Palestinians claim the eastern sector of the city as capital of a future state.

Israel had been threatening to prevent voting in Jerusalem because the Islamic group Hamas, which is committed to Israel's destruction, is running.

On Tuesday, Israel's Security Cabinet recommended that the government boycott elected Hamas representatives unless the group accepts Israel and lays down its weapons, said security officials speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose details.

Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas had said the election would be canceled if Palestinians in east Jerusalem weren't allowed to vote, but said in a televised address Monday that he had received assurances from the U.S. that Jerusalem voting would be allowed.

Olmert's announcement came a day before a team of U.S. envoys were scheduled to arrive to help resolve the dispute.

Israeli police also reversed a ban on allowing Palestinian candidates to campaign in Jerusalem.

On Tuesday, police published conditions for the campaigning, saying that members of terror groups, such Hamas or Islamic Jihad, were still banned. Other candidates could hold meetings in private homes, but assemblies in public buildings would require a police permit.

Rallies in open spaces were banned and election posters were to be displayed only on notice boards put up for the purpose by the municipality. Posters on vehicles were also banned, but small bumper stickers were permitted, the statement said.

According to a press release distributed this morning by the Prime Minister's Media Adviser, Acting Prime Minister Olmert told US Secretary of State Rice yesterday that "on Sunday, 8.1.06, he would submit for Cabinet approval the issue of voting by several hundred eastern Jerusalem Arab at Postal Authority branches, as was done in the 1996 and 2005 PA elections, it being clear that terrorist organizations and their representatives will be
unable to participate in the elections in Jerusalem."

IMRA asked David Baker, Senior Foreign Press Coordinator in the Prime Minister's Office, if the proposal that "terrorist organizations and their
representatives will be unable to participate in the elections in Jerusalem" means that Hamas representatives will not appear on the printed ballots that will be provided at some Jerusalem post offices [as per Annex II Article VI 2.c. (3) (a) of the Interim Agreement of 28 September 1995].

After checking, David Baker called back to advise that the Prime Minister's Office had nothing to add to the press release that had already been distributed.

The AP and Independent Media Review & Analysis contributed to this report.


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