• Published 18:38 09.06.09
  • Latest update 23:12 09.06.09

Hamas: Fatah raids in West Bank hampering Palestinian unity

Meshal makes comments during Egypt trip; Hamas leader, Abbas to attend July 7 reconciliation summit.

By Reuters and Avi Issacharoff Tags: Hamas Fatah Israel news Palestinians

Egyptian efforts to heal a rift between rival Palestinian factions are being hampered by West Bank raids launched by Fatah against Hamas targets, Hamas leader Khaled Meshal said on Tuesday.

Damascus-based Meshal spoke on his first visit to Cairo for many months after Egyptian officials met leaders from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement, which launched the raids last week. Nine people were killed in ensuing violence in the West Bank city of Qalqilya.

The raids, whose casualties included members of both factions, had stoked fears of a wider showdown and highlighted tensions within Palestinian society over Abbas' efforts to rein in militants under a long-stalled U.S.-backed peace "road map."

"We will pursue our policy in cooperating with the Egyptian efforts to reach a real reconciliation but the most difficult obstacle hampering reaching a Palestinian reconciliation is what is happening in the West Bank," Meshal told reporters.

"What is happening in the West Bank cannot be accepted," he said after talks with Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman.

"This obstacle must be resolved in order to create an atmosphere that would allow achieving a reconciliation," Meshal said.

Meshal said Hamas and Egyptian officials discussed some steps to be taken in order to resolve the crisis such as freeing Hamas political detainees and ending the security crackdown.

Egyptian officials met on Sunday with Ahmed Qureia, who leads Fatah negotiators in Cairo-sponsored reconciliation talks, to find ways to sustain talks and end clashes, arrests and counter-arrests by forces loyal to Fatah and Hamas.

"Egypt and Arab countries believed the Palestinian internal division has to end in order to get a stronger U.S. involvement in the peacemaking with Israel," a Palestinian official close to the talks told Reuters earlier.

Several rounds of talks between Fatah and Hamas ended inconclusively, with major differences remaining.

Fatah accused Hamas security forces in the Gaza Strip of detaining dozens of its supporters in recent days. Fatah spokesman in the West Bank, Fahmi Al-Zarir, said 150 of his group's supporters were detained by Hamas on Saturday.

Egyptian mediators stepped up pressure on the groups to form a unity government by setting a July 7 deadline to bridge divisions. That would prepare the ground for a gradual restoration of unity and allow holding presidential and parliamentary election in January 2010.

"So far Egypt is still trying to prevent the collapse of its efforts. A collapse would only harm the Palestinian people and serve Israel," the Palestinian official, asking not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell began a new push to facilitate Israeli-Palestinian peace talks on Tuesday, opening talks with regional leaders.

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