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Hamas says "no hurry" for dialogue with Abbas

Mon Feb 2, 2009 7:47am EST
DAMASCUS, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Hamas will not push for Palestinian reconciliation talks if President Mahmoud Abbas insists on the supremacy of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), the Islamist group said on Monday.

In a statement mocking Abbas and his supporters, a high-level Hamas official accused Abbas of siding with Israel during its recent invasion of Gaza, and seeking to "return on Israeli tanks" to govern the territory.

Abbas on Sunday rejected a call by Hamas to replace the PLO with an organisation less dominated by his allies, and said recognising the primacy of the PLO in representing all Palestinians was a condition for dialogue.

Despite the creation of a Palestinian Authority to govern the territories, the PLO still wields great influence as the internationally recognised "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people", including those in refugee camps in Lebanon, Jordan and Syria. Unlike Hamas, it has recognised Israel.

"Mahmoud Abbas spoke impulsively, perhaps reflecting the confusion he is living in after the victory of Hamas and the resistance in Gaza. We assure him that we are not begging for dialogue and we are not running after it," Hamas official Mohamed Nazzal said in Damascus, where Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal lives in exile.

Hamas regards its position as stronger after withstanding the three-week Israeli offensive on Gaza, which killed more than 1,300 Palestinians, including 700 civilians. A total of 10 Israelis were killed.

"Abbas and his entourage were waiting (during Israel's Gaza invasion) for the collapse of Hamas and the resistance to go back to Gaza on Israeli tanks after many of them fled in their underwear in June 2007," Nazzal said.

Hamas defeated Fatah forces loyal to the Western-backed Abbas and seized control of the Gaza Strip in June 2007, leaving Abbas and his Fatah faction controlling only the West Bank.

Relations between Hamas and Fatah have plummeted since. A push by Egypt last year to convene a unity conference failed when Hamas refused to attend, accusing Abbas of wanting to score political gains at its expense.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad are not part of the PLO, which is dominated by Abbas and the factions loyal to him, despite a 2005 agreement to bring them under its umbrella.

Hamas official Ayman Taha told Reuters in Cairo from Gaza:

"Our position is clear. Our demand is the rebuilding or reform of the PLO, but if the other side insists on not reforming the PLO or rebuilding it, it is our right to look at other options."

Abbas said Hamas was irresponsible for breaking off a six-month truce with Israel in December, and that the rockets it fired gave the Jewish state a pretext for its ferocious attack on Gaza.

Hamas said Israel had undermined the ceasefire by failing to lift its economic blockade of Gaza, most of whose 1.5 million population are refugees living in camps. (Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis; Editing by Kevin Liffey)



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