FRI 29 - 3 - 2024
 
Date: Aug 30, 2014
Source: The Daily Star
Hamas caused prolonged war: Abbas
RAMALLAH, Palestine: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas blamed Hamas Friday for needlessly extending fighting with Israel in the Gaza Strip, casting doubt on the future of the Palestinian unity government that the Islamist militant group backs.
 
The remarks by Abbas come a few days after Israel and Hamas militants reached a truce after 50 bitter days of fighting.
 
More than 2,100 Palestinians were killed, including hundreds of civilians. Seventy-one people on the Israeli side, including six civilians, were killed. Several Egyptian mediated cease-fire attempts during the conflict failed. Hamas eventually accepted almost the same truce offered at the beginning.
 
“It was possible for us to avoid all of that, 2,000 martyrs, 10,000 injured, 50,000 houses [destroyed],” Abbas told Palestine TV in remarks broadcast Friday. He said Hamas had insisted on discussing demands first before ending the cease-fire, which only served to prolong the violence.
 
The war began after three Israeli teens were killed in the West Bank by Hamas operatives in June, prompting Israel to arrest hundreds of Hamas members there. Rocket fire from Gaza on Israeli cities then escalated and Israel launched a massive air and later ground campaign in retaliation. Fighting lasted almost two months.
 
Egyptian mediators tried early on to get the sides to agree to a cease-fire. 

“The Egyptian formula was on the table July 15, it was backed by the Arab League, it was accepted by Israel but rejected by Hamas then and now more than a month later has belatedly been accepted by Hamas,” Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said.
 
“As the dust clears from the conflict I’m sure many people in Gaza will be asking why did Hamas reject a month ago what it accepted today, and if it had accepted then what it accepted now, how much bloodshed could have been avoided.”
 
The two sides agreed Tuesday to an open-ended truce. The cease-fire brought an immediate end to the fighting but left key issues unresolved. 

While Israel agreed to loosen a long-standing blockade to allow humanitarian aid and reconstruction materials into Gaza, many of the border restrictions will remain in place. Hamas, meanwhile, rejected Israel’s demands that it disarm.
 
These deeper matters are to be addressed in indirect talks in Egypt next month.
 
Abbas, whose Palestinian Authority formed a unity government backed by Hamas earlier this year, questioned the future of that arrangement in the interview.
 
The unity government was meant to put an end to the animosity between the two Palestinian groups from when Hamas overran Gaza in 2007, ousting forces from the Fatah party, led by the Western-backed secular Abbas, in bloody street battles. Abbas has since governed only in parts of the West Bank, and Hamas has ruled Gaza.
 
Abbas is eager to regain a foothold in Gaza. With the international community shunning Hamas as a terrorist group, Abbas would be likely to operate Gaza’s borders and oversee internationally funded reconstruction efforts.
 
“They [Hamas] have a shadow government, if this continues it means no unity. The test is coming soon. The government needs to do its job and handle everything,” Abbas said. 

“I’m not saying everything needs to come to an end in one moment, this is a seven-year split that needs months or years,” Abbas said. 

Islamic Jihad fighters paraded through Gaza City in a show of force Friday, marching with light weapons and holding aloft rockets similar to those fired at Israel during the conflict.
 
The spokesman for Islamic Jihad’s armed wing, the Al-Quds Brigades, delivered a speech praising backers Iran and allies Hezbollah and declaring that the group would “redouble efforts” to rearm.
 
Israel “cannot win in Gaza,” said the spokesman known as Abu Hamza. “We have not stopped making weapons, even during the battle, and we will redouble our efforts ... to prepare for the next stage, which we hope will be the battle for freedom.”
 
His words echoed those of the exiled leader of Hamas, the main power in Gaza.
 
“The weapons of the resistance are sacred and we will not accept that they be on the agenda” of future talks with Israel, Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal told reporters Thursday in Doha.
 
A top Iranian military official vowed to help Palestinian militants to rearm.
 
“Be assured that the Iranian people and the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps will help you more than in the past in all defense and social domains,” said IRGC commander Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, in quotes posted on the organization’s official website.



 
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