Fatah, Hamas come to terms
IRNA - Islamic Republic News Agency
Gaza City, March 24, IRNA
Politics-Palestine-Deal
Rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas have come to terms with signing a deal to revive direct talks after months of rivalry.
The two factions reconvened in San'a on Sunday in an effort to hammer out a compromise over the future of the Gaza Strip and West Bank.
"We, the representatives of Fatah and Hamas, agree to the Yemeni initiative as a framework to resume dialogue between the two movements to return the Palestinian situation to what it was before the Gaza incidents," the San'a Declaration said.
The deal, which was signed by top Hamas negotiator Moussa Abu Marzouk and senior Fatah official Azzam al-Ahmed, also affirmed the "unity of the Palestinian people, territory and authority." The talks, launched last week by Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, had come close to collapse several times.
Saleh had pressed the two sides to agree to hold direct talks early April on the plan that calls for the Gaza Strip to return to the way it was before Hamas seized the area in June after routing Fatah forces.
The issue of the future of Gaza has been a main point of contention, with Fatah demanding that Hamas resistance group give up control of the territory.
A Hamas official said on Saturday the group asked that the same should apply to the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority has dismissed a Hamas-led government and arrested some Hamas supporters.
The Yemeni plan also envisages Palestinian elections, the creation of another unity government and the reform of Palestinian security forces along national rather than factional lines.
Fatah had said it would agree to direct reconciliation talks with Hamas only if the Islamic group first agreed to relinquish its hold on Gaza, home to 1.5 million Palestinians.
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