Special report:
Hamas, Fatah agree to end
violence
RAMALLAH, June 19 (Xinhua) -- The ruling Islamic
Resistance Movement (Hamas) and the Fatah movement agreed on Monday to end
violence between supporters of the two groups and settle their differences
through dialogue.
Officials from the two groups signed an agreement
named the "Document of Honor and National Oath" in the West Bank city of
Ramallah, calling for followers to boost social security and avoid clashes.
Loyalists to the once-dominant Fatah and militants of
Hamas have confronted against each other over the dispute on the control of the
security forces. Over a dozen people have been killed in the violence during the
past month.
Hamas took the reins of the Palestinian government in
late March after defeating Fatah in the January legislative elections.
But most of the regular security forces are Fatah
supporters and Abbas has appointed a close ally to head the security forces and
reinforced his elite troops in the Gaza Strip.
Tensions have mounted since President Mahmoud Abbas,
who is also Fatah's chairman, issued a presidential decree to call for a
referendum on a proposal seeking a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Hamas' charter formally calls for Israel's destruct.
The group has so far refused to renounce violence, recognize Israel's right to
exist and accept previous Palestinian-Israeli agreements.
Fatah, once long dominant on the Palestinian
political arena, has supported a two-state solution to the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict and espoused negotiations with the Jewish state.
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