Reuters Photojournalism
Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography. See more | Photo caption
The SpaceX mission
A privately owned unmanned rocket blasts off on a mission to be the first commercial flight to the International Space Station. Slideshow
Hamas has widened Palestinian divide: Abbas aide
RAMALLAH, West Bank |
RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Hamas has widened the divide among Palestinians by setting bolder terms for unity talks with Fatah rivals after Israel's attack on Gaza, an aide to the Palestinian president said on Thursday.
"We listened to a plan to complete and consecrate the split" between the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip and the West Bank controlled by President Mahmoud Abbas, Yasser Abed-Rabbo said of a speech by Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal.
Meshaal said on Wednesday, after a 22-day Israeli offensive in which 1,300 Palestinians were killed in Gaza, that Hamas would not allow aid and reconstruction money into "corrupt hands" of those who "collaborated," in an apparent reference to Abbas's Fatah group.
He demanded the Western-backed Abbas end security cooperation with Israel and free Hamas militants from Fatah's jails in the West Bank before Palestinian unity talks, deadlocked for months, could resume.
Abed-Rabbo said Meshaal's comments seemed like a conspiracy meant to widen a rift between the two Palestinian groups, divided since Hamas seized control of Gaza from Fatah forces in 2007, a year after winning a parliamentary election.
He told a news conference in the West Bank town of Ramallah that Meshaal's conditions for reconciliation talks had crossed a line by putting Hamas rule in Gaza above the goal of achieving Palestinian unity.
Hamas, which refuses to recognize Israel and has proclaimed victory from the Israeli offensive despite heavy losses, says Abbas has got nowhere by arresting militants as he pursued U.S.-brokered talks that have failed to achieve a goal of setting up an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Some Palestinian analysts said Hamas seemed to have set a priority since the war with Israel of keeping control of Gaza rather than trying to mend fences with Fatah in the West Bank, a territory occupied by Israel since the 1967 war.
In his remarks from Damascus, Meshaal also called on Palestinians in the West Bank to "rise in revolt and resist" against Israel, rather than pursue peace talks.
"Meshaal is projecting Hamas as a winner and that should be translated into political gains," politics professor Bassem Izbed said of the outcome of the Israeli offensive that ended with both sides declaring separate ceasefires on Sunday.
"He's saying 'If we go for dialogue then you are going to have a tougher time because our terms have changed'," Izbed said.
In Sanaa, a Yemeni official told Reuters that Meshaal was to visit Yemen in the next few days to discuss a Yemeni initiative for talks between the Palestinian factions. He said Fatah had responded positively to the initiative.
(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta and Allyn Fisher-Ilan in Jerusalem; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints





Follow Reuters