By Avi Issacharoff, Haaretz Correspondent, and News Agencies
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas told U.S. President
George W. Bush in a phone call Monday that now is the time to resume
Middle East peace talks, Abbas' spokesman said.
"Abbas told Mr. Bush that this is the time to resume the political
negotiations and to revive the hope of the Palestinian people,' said
Nabil Abu Rudeineh, who sat with Abbas during the phone call.In the
15-minute phone conversation, Abbas told Bush about the steps he has
taken, including swearing in an emergency Cabinet and outlawing Hamas'
militia forces.
Bush pledged in return help and support to Abbas. The U.S. is expected
to lift its embargo on aid to the PA, imposed in the wake of Hamas'
victory in the Palestinian parliamentary elections last year.
The president noted that he plans to meet Tuesday with Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert, and that he would share their thoughts on how to proceed,
said White House press secretary Tony Snow.
"What's important is, you have to have a partner who is commited to
peace, and we believe that President Abbas is," Snow said. "And
therefore we are commited to working with this new emergency government.
Hamas' violent takeover of the Gaza Strip last week split the
Palestinian government in two: the Hamas leadership headed by deposed
prime minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas in Gaza and the new cabinet now
led by the Western-backed economist Salam Fayad in the West Bank.
"We have said that Hamas is a terrorist organization," Snow said. "I
think it's pretty clear what our stance has been."
Abbas' emergency cabinet, bolstered by Western promises to resume aid,
vowed Monday to exert its authority over the Hamas-controlled strip.
"The government will pursue its jurisdiction over all parts of the
homeland, regardless of what happened in Gaza," Abbas' Information
Minister Riyad al-Malki told reporters after the new government met in
the West Bank town of Ramallah.
It is unclear how much influence Abbas' government can have in Gaza,
now fully under Hamas' control. Gaza and the West Bank are separated by
30 miles of Israeli territory.
"We still do not have a clear plan," Malki said.
Asked how he would enforce the law in violence-prone Gaza, Abbas's
interior minister in charge of security, Abdel-Razzak Yahya, said: "I
swear to God I do not know."
Abbas on Monday formed a committee of inquiry to look into Fatah's
defeat in Gaza at the hands of Hamas.
The committee will be headed by PA Secretary-General Tayeb Abdul Rahim,
a member of Fatah's Central Committee.
Abbas also dissolved the National Security Council on Monday, in a
further bid to weaken Hamas, who was represented on the committee by
Haniyeh.
The step was seen as meant to reduce the standing of Abbas' national
security advisor, Mohammed Dahlan, who was to head the council. Dahlan
has been under heavy criticism within Fatah for his poor performance
and responsibility for Fatah's defeat in the Gaza Strip.
Some of Dahlan's associates, however, said Monday that the move was
purely an administrative one, as Hamas officials had been on the panel,
and had no bearing on Dahlan.
Also Monday, imprisoned Tanzim leader Marwan Barghouti issued a
statement calling for the dismissal of all PA security forces
commanders and Fatah leaders responsible for the Gaza defeat - a clear
reference to Dahlan.
Barghouti called for a new Fatah leadership to be appointed in the Gaza
Strip comprised of Fatah leaders who are in Gaza - veiled criticism of
Dahlan's men, who fled to Ramallah.
The jailed Tanzim leader also called for the Fatah leadership to be
purged of corrupt officials.
Original Source
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