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| Members of the Palestinian Legislative
Council (PLC) celebrate in Gaza, March 28, 2006. (Xinhua
photo) | GAZA/RAMALLAH,
March 28 (Xinhua) -- An overwhelming majority among the members of the
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) that convened in both Gaza and Ramallah on
Tuesday gave their confidence to the new cabinet formed by Prime Minister
designate Ismail Haneya.
Aziz Dweik, speaker of the PLC, announced after the
voting that 71 voted in favor of giving the new cabinet their confidence, while
36 members voted against the motion and 2 sustained.
The number of the PLC members is 132, where 109 who
voted, while 13 members are imprisoned in Israeli jails and 10 were absent.
According to the protocol of the Palestinian basic
law, right after the voting, Haneya and his 24 cabinet ministers as well as the
cabinet's secretary should do the sworn-in before the president of the
Palestinian National Authority (PNA).
Dweik announced that the PLC would hold a session on
Wednesday for the sworn-in ceremony, where President Mahmoud Abbas is scheduled
to attend upon his return from an Arab summit in Sudan.
"A special session would be held on Wednesday, also
in both Gaza and Ramallah via the video conferencing system to enable the new
cabinet to go for the sworn-in where president Abbas is scheduled to attend,"
said Dweik.
Palestinian sources disclosed that Abbas would return
home later on Tuesday. On Wednesday he would join the PLC session that would be
held in Ramallah and would contact Gaza Strip PLC members through the video
conference as usual.
Right after the overwhelming voting that Haneya's
cabinet won the PLC confidence, PLC Hamas members screamed "Allah Akbar" (Godis
Great) and "Thanks to Allah" (God).
"It is the first time ever for Hamas movement, which
was founded in 1987 as a resistance movement, to lead the Palestinian people in
a government that it had formed," said Nabil Abu Safeya, a resident from Gaza.
He added that "we wish them all success, and we hope
that they would be able to carry this heavy responsibility and change our
miserable economical and political situations."
Before the PLC members vote, Haneya defended the
political platform of his government, where he criticized those who said
Haneya's cabinet didn't mention the word resistance.
"Okay, I would change this paragraph in the text of
my program and I will say that resistance is the right of the occupied people to
end the occupation and establish an independent Palestinian state," said
Haneya.
He added that "those who criticized my platform,
depending on a previous position, I would tell them the platform was born from
resistance, and I mentioned the word resistance in more than a position."
Haneya recalled on the American administration to be
more reasonable and not to launch statement and previous judges on a Palestinian
cabinet elected via polling stations.
He also clarified that the PLC would finalize
discussing his plat form and hoped his cabinet would gain the PLC confidence. He
respected the opinion of every one whether they gave the cabinet avote of
confidence or vote of no confidence.
The PLC convened on Tuesday in both Gaza and the West
Bank city of Ramallah, where it started three-day sessions to listen to Haneya's
cabinet platform, to debate its text and go for a confidence voting to the
cabinet.
Leaders of five opposition parties in the PLC, except
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), voted against Haneya's
cabinet, saying it didn't say that the PLO is the sole and legitimate
representative of the Palestinian people.
The parties, including Fatah movement, the
Alternative List, the Independent Palestine and the Third way had said they
would not approve Haneya cabinet that was presented to the PLC for a confidence
voting.
Qais Abdel Kareem, a member of the Democratic Front
for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) said that the Alternative party, which
represents the DFLP, wouldn't give Haneya cabinet a vote of confidence.
Jameel Majdalawi, head of Abu Ali Mustafa party,
representing the Poplar Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), said that
"despite the disagreement in the political platform of Haneya and the platform
of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), but our party will give the cabinet
a vote of confidence."
He, however, called on Haneya to consider a formation
of a Palestinian national coalition that observes the people's highest
interests.
Fatah movement's members, whose movement achieved the
second place in the PLC following Hamas, had said that they wouldn't give the
new cabinet their confidence because of the political disputes between Hamas
platform and the PLO platform.
The PLC, which Hamas overwhelmed after the January
legislative election, held a special session on Monday, when Haneya presented
his cabinet as well as its political, economical and security platforms for a
confidence vote.
It seemed certain that Haneya's cabinet should get a confidence vote since his Hamas group has a majority of 74 seats in the 132-member legislature, even if the entire non-Hamas members vote against it. Enditem
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