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JERUSALEM, Feb. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- The Israeli cabinet
will decide on sanctions on a Hamas-led Palestinian government on Sunday, one
day after the newly-elected Hamas-dominated Palestinian parliament is sworn in,
Israel Radio reported on Friday.
Earlier reports said that the cabinet, now led by Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, would
come to a decision on Friday on sanction proposals put forward by the Defense
Ministry. The proposals, including barring Palestinians from traveling between
the West Bank and Gaza via Israel and a ban on Palestinian workers from entering
Israel, were submitted to Olmert on Friday, said the report, adding that the
acting prime minister was currently weighing the possible sanctions.
The suggestions were formed during a meeting of
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and security chiefs in Jerusalem on Thursday, a
move seen as aimed to present a tough Israeli response to Hamas' landslide
election victory and possible leading role in the next Palestinian government.
The proposed sanctions also include an immediate halt
of monthly transfer of tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of the
Palestinians to the Palestinian National Authority and a freeze on plans to
build a Gaza seaport and renovate the Gaza airport. Meanwhile, Israel Radio
reported that Israel decided on Friday to block Gaza-based Hamas lawmakers to
travel to the West Bankcity of Ramallah for Saturday's swearing-in ceremony. In
response, the Palestinian side announced earlier that the session would be held
simultaneously in both Ramallah and the GazaStrip via videophones.
Following Israel's sanction threat, senior Hamas
leader Ismail Haneya, which headed the Hamas list in the Jan. 25 polls and is a
favorite for prime minister nomination, accused Israel of inflicting "collective
punishment", vowing that the group would not kneel before such Israeli measures.
Meanwhile, Mofaz reiterated during a Friday meeting
with visiting European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana that the Jewish
state would not deal with a Hamas-run Palestinian government until the group
renounced violence, recognized Israel's right to exist and committed itself to
the internationally-backed road map peace plan which envisions an independent
Palestinian state alongside a secure Israel.
Hamas, or the Islamic Resistance Movement, has won 74
seats in the 132-member Palestinian government and is expected to form a
government after the legislature takes office. Enditem |