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GAZA, Jan. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Palestinians on
Wednesday vote in their first parliamentary election in a decade with pollsters
predicting the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) could be brought into the
government for the first time.
Pollsters said the race was too
close to call for both Hamas and the ruling Fatah Party of President Mahmoud
Abbas. Opinion polls show that Hamas, running for parliament for the first time,
lags behind the Fatah with just one percentage point.
Some 1.4 million people are eligible to vote for the
132-member Palestinian Legislative Council, and pollsters predicted a turnoutof
at least 75 percent.
Hamas spokesman Mushir al-Masri said he expected that
his groupwould win half of the seats.
Hamas leaders have talked by phone for the recent
days with Abbas about possible cooperation in the future government. "Hamas will
not be in the government by itself," said al-Masri.
In recent days, Hamas signaled some flexibility on
relationship with Israel, with which it had long ruled out negotiations. A
senior Hamas official said earlier this week that talks with Israel were "not
taboo."
Fatah leaders were optimistic that they would get
over half of the votes but prefer governing with parties smaller than Hamas if
forced to form a coalition. They maintain that Hamas would be the last choice
for a coalition.
Abbas hoped that Hamas, if elected into parliament,
could be ready to disarm under the "roadmap" plan.
The United States has reiterated it viewed Hamas as a
"terrorist organization" and would have "practical problems" dealing with Hamas.
Israeli officials have cautioned that a victory for
Hamas, whose charter pursues the destruction of the Jewish state, could
terminate the Middle East peace process.
Israel's acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said he
hoped the Palestinian poll would create a government that is ready to followthe
"road map."
The Palestinian National Authority (PNA) rejected on
Tuesday any "external intervention" in forming the future PNA cabinet following
the elections.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told the
Voice of Palestine radio that such intervention in the Palestinian democratic
life is totally rejected, adding that the PNA will not allow any external sides
to interfere.
Security has been tightened before the Wednesday
elections. On Tuesday,the Palestinian Interior Ministry announced a state of
emergency in a bid to ensure a secure and smooth legislative election.
Tawfik Abu Khousa, spokesman of the interior
ministry, said in a press statement that as of Tuesday, 13,000 Palestinian
security officers and policemen will be deployed inside and around voting
stations to protect the polls, which will be held in the West Bank,the Gaza
Strip and East Jerusalem.
The state of emergency will last till results of the
elections are announced, he said, adding that "instructions have been made to
security members to provide security to all voting stations."
Security forces will prevent any attempts to obstruct
the election and bar armed men from entering the voting stations regardless of
their positions, Abu Khousa added.
Major groups, including the ruling Fatah movement and
Hamas, pledged to maintain calm on the election day in a joint statement
released on Tuesday.
A spokesman of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an armed
wing of Fatah, said that militants would wear civilian clothes and bear noarms
near and inside the polling stations on Wednesday.
A joint statement by Fatah, Hamas, the Popular front
for the Liberation of Palestine, the Palestinian National Resistance Brigades
and the Popular Resistance Committees said that the groups opposed any attempts
or any faction to disrupt the voting.
The statement also said that the groups supported the
PNA's decision to only authorize security forces to protect the ballot.
Despite chaos in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in
recent months,violence related to the upcoming elections has been relatively
limited.
On Tuesday, a member of the Fatah movement was killed
by unidentified gunmen in the West Bank city of Nablus.
Police said that Yousef Joma Hasouna, 35, was shot in
the head in heated argument which erupted as the gunmen tried to prevent him
from hanging a poster of a Fatah candidate for Wednesday's elections on a wall
in Rafedya, Nablus. Enditem |