Hamas ready to deal with US peace planAugust 13th, 2009 GAZA - Hamas will deal "positively" with the new peace plan by the US but only if a separate Palestinian state is recognized, an aide to the Islamic movement's leader Ismail Haneya said Thursday. "We have an initial readiness to accept it and deal with it positively but we will also reject it if it doesn't include an American recognition of Palestinian rights," said Yousef Rizka, Haneya's political advisor.
Palestinians' Fatah movement seeks renewal, battles chaos in first convention in 20 yearsAugust 4th, 2009 Fatah seeks renewal in first conference since 1989BETHLEHEM, West Bank — The Palestinians' Fatah movement came together Tuesday for its first convention in 20 years, trying to rise from division and defeat with a pragmatic political program and new leaders in what its supporters hope will be the final push toward Palestinian statehood. Fatah's leader, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, expects the three-day convention to boost his standing and strengthen his hand in dealing with his Hamas rivals and with Israel's hawkish prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.
Fatah, Hamas fail to reconcileJuly 1st, 2009 GAZA/CAIRO - Leaders of rival Fatah and Islamic Hamas movement failed to overcome their disputes and reach an agreement by a July 7 deadline set by Cairo, and have agreed to hold a seventh round of dialogue in Cairo July 25, officials said Tuesday. Fatah negotiator Zakareya el-Agha told the Palestinian news agency Wafa of President Mahmoud Abbas that a sixth round of inter-reconciliation dialogue had ended without agreement.
Hamas leader says halt in Israeli settlement construction is 'essential step'June 9th, 2009 Hamas leader: Israeli settlement freeze essentialCAIRO — The top leader of the militant Hamas group said Tuesday that President Barack Obama's pressure on Israel to freeze construction in West Bank settlements was an essential step toward restarting peace efforts. The militant group — which is eager to win international acceptance of its rule in Gaza though it is shunned by the U.S.
6 dead in West Bank flare-up between Hamas, Palestinian policeMay 31st, 2009 6 dead in internal Palestinian fightingQALQILIYA, West Bank — Palestinian security officials say six people have been killed in a firefight between Hamas fighters and Palestinian policemen in the West Bank. The officials say three of the men are Palestinian policemen loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah.
Senior Fatah, Hamas leaders meet in GazaApril 9th, 2009 GAZA - Leaders of the rival Hamas and Fatah movements held a meeting in Hamas-ruled Gaza Wednesday to discuss reconstruction of the Gaza Strip and mutual reconciliation. The meeting between the two movements' leaders is the first of its kind since Hamas's takeover of the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2007 following weeks of bloodshed between the two groups' warring militants.
Palestinian factions return to Cairo for talksMarch 31st, 2009 GAZA/CAIRO - Representatives of rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah returned to Cairo Tuesday to resume talks on forming a national unity government, representatives of the groups said. Egyptian-mediated talks between Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah faction, which controls the West Bank, were scheduled to resume Tuesday, ahead of a broader meeting including more factions Wednesday.
Palestinian talks still stalled on unity cabinet platformMarch 19th, 2009 GAZA CITY/CAIRO - Palestinian factions had agreed in Cairo that the unity government they are trying to form will be a transitional one that would prepare for new elections to be held no later than Jan 25, 2010, Hamas has said. But the sides had reached no breakthrough Wednesday on the government's platform, with the main point of disagreement remaining whether it should endorse past interim peace deals signed by the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), expressing recognition of Israel and calling for a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict.
Hamas accuses Fatah of blocking dialogueMarch 16th, 2009 GAZA - The Palestinian Islamic resistance movement, Hamas, Sunday accused its rival Fatah movement of blocking the progress of the unity talks the factions hold in Cairo. Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesman for Hamas, said that Fatah still crack down against Hamas's supporters in West Bank.
Palestinian premier Fayyad resigns in 'reconciliation' bidMarch 8th, 2009 RAMALLAH - Palestinian acting premier Salam Fayyad stepped down Saturday saying he wanted to pave the way for reconciliation between the Hamas movement and President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah. However, Abbas promptly asked Fayyad to stay in office until 'results of national unity talks become clear'.
Palestinian PM resignsMarch 7th, 2009 RAMALLAH - Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad Saturday said he has submitted his resignation to President Mahmoud Abbas. Informed sources said that Fayyad made the decision in order to pave the way for reconciliation ahead of talks between the Islamic Hamas movement and Abbas' secular Fatah due in Cairo March 10.
Hamas, Fatah start reconciliation meeting in CairoFebruary 27th, 2009 CAIRO - Rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah started national unity talks in Cairo Thursday to overcome a bitter split between rival governments in the West bank and Gaza. The Cairo meeting, sponsored by Egyptian intelligence Chief Omar Suleiman, urged Palestinian factions to overcome their disputes and focus on the best interests of the Palestinian people.
'Iran's Islamic Revolution inspired Palestinians'February 9th, 2009 TABRIZ - The Hamas movement fighting the Israeli security forces to establish an independent Palestinian state has said that Iran's Islamic Revolution inspired the group to continue its struggle. Abu Osama Abd al-Muati, Hamas representative in Tehran, said Iran's successful Islamic revolution of the 1970s inspired the Palestinian people to continue its fight against the Israeli occupation in their territories.
Fatah calls on Hamas for unconditioned dialogueFebruary 7th, 2009 RAMALLAH - A senior official of pro-west President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement has called on its rival Islamic Hamas movement for an unconditioned dialogue and inter-reconciliation. Ahmed Abdel Rahman, Fatah spokesman in the West Bank said in a written statement Saturday that 'Fatah movement and other factions call on Hamas movement to abandon political split and accept an unconditioned comprehensive dialogue'.
Hamas delegation in Cairo for talks on Gaza ceasefireJanuary 24th, 2009 CAIRO - Egyptian officials were Sunday meeting with representatives of Hamas and other Palestinian factions in talks aimed at turning a one-week ceasefire into a durable truce, Egypt's official Middle East News Agency said. Speaking to the satellite news network al-Arabiya, Ayman Taha, a representative of Hamas from Gaza, said that the group would not agree to an open-ended truce, but was prepared to negotiate an 18-month ceasefire.