GAZA, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian officials
announced on Monday night that the ten-day national dialogue had failed to agree
on a document of accordance, or the National Accordance, reached by Palestinian
prisoners in Israeli jails.
Azzam al-Ahmad, chief of Fatah
movement's block in the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) told
reporters that the national dialogue failed to agree on the prisoners' document
of national concord.
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
(PFLP) also announced that the last session of the ten-day national dialogue
that was held in Ramallah on Monday night failed to agree on approving the
document.
The document of concord was considered by President
Mahmoud Abbas, as well as his Fatah movement and other factions, excluding the
ruling Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), the Islamic Jihad and other minor
left wing parties, as a document of political program.
President Abbas opened on May 25 a national dialogue
by asking Palestinian factions to accept and adopt within ten days the National
Accordance filed by Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, or he would put the
proposal to a referendum within 40 days. The prisoners' document calls for the
establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the territories that were
occupied by Israel in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Hamas, which remains committed to the destruction of
Israel, has so far refused to accept the document which is widely seen as
implicit recognition of the Jewish state.
The movement, the ruling party that leads the
government and the parliament, announced earlier that it boycotted the dialogue
and reject holding a referendum on the document of concord in the Palestinian
territories.
Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Palestinian
Legislative Council (PLC) and also a member in the committee of national
dialogue, announced that the dialogue failed to agree on the prisoners
documents.
She told reporters that President Abbas is determined
to bring the issue of the document to the Palestinian public for a referendum, a
question that would bring more arguments between the Hamas-led government and
Abbas.
Meanwhile, Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haneya
and President Abbas spent on Monday night almost one hour on telephone
discussing the current situation, sources at their offices reported.
The sources said that the phone call was very
important and both men had discussed many essential issues of a common interest
to the Palestinian people. Enditem