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Related: Hamas wins Palestinian elections
US position toward Hamas unchanged:
Rice
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| Hamas leader, Ismail
Hanieh, attends a press conference in Gaza City, Jan. 26,
2005. |
RAMALLAH, Jan. 26 (Xinhuanet) -- The Islamic
Resistance Movement (Hamas) surprisingly won a crushing victory in Wednesday's
Palestinian parliamentary elections.
World leaders' reaction to the results was almost
unanimous. Fearing that the radical military group's coming to power would harm
the peace process in the Middlea East, they demanded it commit itself to the
path of peace.
Hanna Nasser, chief of the Central Election
Commission (CEC) said Hamas won 76 seats and Fatah got 43 seats in the new
132-seat parliament.
Nasser told reporters in an official announcement
that the Hamas movement won 30 PLC seats in the lists and 46 seats in the
constituencies.
The Fatah movement won 27 seats in the lists and 16
seats in the constituencies.
The official result came after Hamas claimed earlier
on Thursday that it had garnered 77 seats in the elections.
It was the first legislative bid for Hamas, a major
radical militant group against Israeli occupation which boycotted the first
elections and voiced opposition to the Oslo Accords signed in 1993.
Fatah, a previously dominant movement led by
President Mahmoud Abbas, admitted defeat after the Hamas victory.
Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei on Thursday presented a
letter of resignation to Abbas, paving the way for the winner to form a new
cabinet.
The surprising victory for Hamas adds uncertainty to
the prospects of the Mideast peace process, as the militant group is still
listed as a terrorist organization by Israel, the United States and the European
Union (EU).
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| Palestinian gunmen from Fatah movement fire
into the air next to Abbas' home in Gaza Jan. 27.
(Xinhua/Reuters) |
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan hailed the "peaceful
and orderly" conduct of the Palestinian elections.
In a statement released by his spokesman, Annan said
he viewed the elections as an important step towards the achievement of a
Palestinian state.
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana voiced the
bloc's joy over the smooth running of the Palestinian elections, saying the EU
would analyze the "new situation" of Palestine soon.
According to Solana, the Quartet -- the EU, the
United Nations,the United States and Russia -- will hold a ministerial meeting
next Monday in London to "discuss this new situation."
U.S. President George W. Bush called on Hamas to
abandon violence. "I know you can't be a partner for peace if your party has got
an armed wing," he told a White House news conference.
Meanwhile, he said he wants Palestinian President
Abbas to stayin office despite Hamas' election victory.
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| Tens of thousands of people rally in the West Bank city of Ramallah to celebrate Hamas victiory in Palestinian parliamentary elections. | "We'd like him to stay in power. I mean, we'd (like)
him to stay in office. He is in power. We'd like him to stay in office," Bush
said.
Earlier on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice also called Abbas to say that Washington supports him and his
policies.
Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel
will not negotiate with a new Palestinian government that includes Hamas
members.
An Israeli emergency cabinet meeting on Thursday
night decided that Israel would not negotiate with Hamas until it renounced
violence and recognized Israel's right to exist.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
called on Hamasto renounce violence if it takes part in government.
"Those taking part in government must swear off the
use of violence," he noted, saying the second condition was to recognize
Israel's right to exist.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that
Russia has "always respected and will respect the democratic choice of the
Palestinian people."
"It will be of fundamental importance that all
participants in the Palestinian political process should be committed to
peacefully fulfilling the internationally recognized expectations of the
Palestinian people," it said.
Iran congratulated Hamas on its victory. "The
Palestinian people faithfully chose the option of resistance and are to fully
support it," Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hamid-Reza Asefi said.
The Swedish government warned that Hamas would have
to change its ways to win cooperation from the EU.
"Hamas must radically change its policies, otherwise
Sweden and the EU will not be able to cooperate with a future Palestinian
government in which Hamas will have a dominant position," Foreign Minister Laila
Freivalds said.
Egypt said it respects the results of the Palestinian
parliamentary elections and expressed the hope that the results could help push
forward the peace process in the region. Enditem |