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WAR REPORT
Palestinians pledge unity as Israel talks teeter
by Staff Writers
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) April 23, 2014


Palestinian unity may 'complicate' peace bid: US
Washington (AFP) April 23, 2014 - The United States on Wednesday warned that a deal to form a Palestinian unity government could seriously hamper its already floundering efforts to forge a peace deal with Israel.

Any Palestinian government must commit "unambiguously" to the principles of non-violence and to the existence of Israel as well as to already agreed treaties, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said, restating a long-held US position.

"Absent a clear commitment to those principles... this could seriously complicate not just our efforts, but the efforts between the parties more importantly to extend the negotiations," she told reporters.

"It's hard to see how Israel can be expected to negotiate with a government that does not believe in its right to exist."

Washington was both "disappointed" and "troubled" by Wednesday's announcement of a rapprochement between the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) -- internationally recognized as the sole representative of the Palestinian people -- and the Islamist Hamas which rules the Gaza Strip, Psaki said.

The clocking is ticking down to an April 29 deadline set by US Secretary of State John Kerry last year when he dragged the two sides back to the negotiating table in July.

The Israelis and Palestinians both agreed to continue the negotiations -- which had been frozen for three years -- for the next nine months with the aim of reaching a full peace treaty.

But the talks are in complete disarray despite Kerry's dogged efforts during a dozen trips to the region in his first year as the top US diplomat.

The Palestinian move, which appeared to have taken US officials by surprise, is yet another blow to the peace talks which seem to be hurtling towards complete collapse.

Kerry had telephoned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Psaki said, and the US negotiating team on the ground was seeking more information from the Palestinians about the outlines of the deal.

Hamas has been blacklisted by the US government since 1997. And its participation in any power-sharing government led by president Mahmud Abbas's Fatah party could also lead to a cut-off in US aid and funding to the Palestinians, although Psaki refused to speculate on that.

"I think that the ball at this point is in the Palestinians' court to answer these questions as to whether these principles would be met through" the reconciliation process," Psaki said, noting that such unity efforts had been tried and failed in the past.

"If President Abbas were to continue to pursue reconciliation, Hamas would need to abide by these principles in order to be a part of the government."

A joint PLO and Hamas statement said that an independent Palestinian government would be formed within five weeks and tasked with holding parliamentary and presidential elections within six months. The news brought thousands of people out onto the streets of the Hamas-ruled and impoverished Gaza Strip in celebration.

Rival Palestinian leaders from the West Bank and Gaza Strip agreed on Wednesday to form a unity government soon, bringing thousands of people on to the streets in celebration.

Amid the jublilation, an Israeli air strike on Gaza wounded six people, the coastal territory's Islamist ruling movement Hamas said.

"An agreement has been reached on the formation within five weeks of an independent government headed by president Mahmud Abbas," said a joint statement read out by Hamas's Gaza premier Ismail Haniya in front of a visiting delegation from the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO).

It was not the first time that the rivals have announced a deal to end seven years of separate Palestinian administrations in the West Bank and Gaza.

But the latest attempt by the West Bank-based Palestinian leadership to reconcile with Hamas in Gaza drew an angry reaction from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who said it showed it was not serious about 11th-hour efforts to salvage US-brokered peace negotiations.

Shortly after the deal was announced an Israeli warplane attacked a target at Beit Lahiya, north of Gaza City, wounding six people, one seriously, the Hamas interior ministry said.

An Israeli military statement described the strike as "a joint counter-terrorism operation" by the air force and the Shin Bet intelligence agency, and indicated that it missed its intended target.

- Public jubilation across Gaza -

"A hit was not identified," it said, without elaborating.

The Palestinian agreement was reached during overnight talks in Gaza City between Hamas leaders and a PLO team headed by Azzam al-Ahmad, a senior figure in Abbas's Fatah movement.

It was greeted with public celebration in Gaza City and in towns and refugee camps throughout the enclave, with crowds waving Palestinian flags and shouting "Palestinian unity!"

The rival sides have announced several times before that they would make way for a coalition of technocrats, but such pledges were never implemented and analysts expressed scepticism that this time would be any different.

"People have heard the same thing over and over again and each time the agreement had been broken by either Fatah or Hamas," said Samir Awad, politics professor at Birzeit University in the West Bank.

Analyst Hani al-Masri said: "This reconciliation has hardly any substance on the ground. It could collapse at any moment.

"Reconciliation (between the Palestinian factions) and negotiations (with Israel) are now just tactics -- each side has its own calculations."

The latest announcement of a deal came as US-brokered peace talks teetered on the edge of collapse, and drew an angry response from Netanyahu who accused the Palestinian president of choosing a deal with Hamas instead of an agreement with Israel.

- 'Abbas has to choose' -

"Instead of moving into peace with Israel, he's moving into peace with Hamas," the Israeli premier said.

"He has to choose. Does he want peace with Hamas or peace with Israel?

"You can have one but not the other. I hope he chooses peace, so far he hasn't done so."

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat countered that peace with Israel was impossible without Palestinian unity.

"We can't reach peace without reconciliation first," he said.

Erakat held yet another meeting with his Israeli counterpart Tzipi Livni and US envoy Martin Indyk on Tuesday in a bid to salvage the peace talks, which are due to end on April 29 if there is no agreement on their extension.

"The meeting lasted several hours but we did not manage to overcome our differences," Erakat said.

"We will continue to meet the Israeli delegation up to April 29 but clearly the Israelis don't want to move the peace process forward."

Abbas has said he will extend the negotiations only if Israel frees a batch of Arab prisoners previously earmarked for release, freezes settlement building in the West Bank, including annexed east Jerusalem, and agrees to discuss the borders of a future Palestinian state.

Netanyahu on Wednesday accused him of setting impossible terms.

"We're trying to relaunch the negotiations with the Palestinians. Every time we get to that point, Abu Mazen (Abbas) stacks on additional conditions which he knows that Israel cannot give."

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