Special report: Israel launches Gaza assault
Special report: Internal situation in Palestine
GAZA, Oct. 2 (Xinhua) -- Hamas-led Palestinian government spokesman Ghazi Hamad said Monday that Hamas didn't accept the Arab peace initiative because it calls for recognizing Israel, asserting they would never recognize the Jewish state.
Moreover, Hamad hinted that Islamic Resistance
Movement (Hamas) would never meet any pressure to recognize Israel, and it
prefers to give up governing than recognizing the Jewish state.
"The issue of sitting on power is not a victory and
Hamas has no intention to recognize Israel regardless the results," said Hamad.
Hamad was defying international demands to recognize
Israel, renounce violence and abide by regional peace deals.
The Middle East Quartet urged Hamas to accept these
demands in order to get an embargo and Western sanctions on the Palestinian
National Authority (PNA) lifted.
"Hamas movement will not comply with interior or
exterior pressures to accept the Quartet's conditions," added Hamad.
The Palestinian factions, including Hamas, agreed on
a plan of two-state solution in a bid to overcome international pressure, but
the issue of recognizing Israel still forming a point of disagreement. The same
controversial point also delayed the formation of a national unity government.
"We agreed on all Prisoners' Document except the
issue of Arab Peace initiative because it asked all factions to recognize Israel
before joining the government of national unity," Hamad clarified.
Late last month, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
said talks with the governing Hamas to form a coalition government have gone
back to zero.
But Hamad denies, saying that "we can't say talks
have declined to zero," he added that "great efforts were being made to
establish the new government." However, he didn't give a time when the
government would come into existence.
"Calling for urgent understandings between Hamas and
Fatah movements to tackle internal problems," Hamad warned from increasing
levels of poverty, unemployment and disorder in the occupied Palestinian
Territories.
Hamad, meanwhile, criticized the one-month long
public strike by unpaid governmental employees and chaotic actions by striking
security members which sparked deadly clashes that left nine Palestinians
killed.
The employees have not been paid regularly since
Hamas-led government took office in last March. Instead, the government paid
loans and partial advanced payments.
Furthermore, Hamad dismissed threats by Israel to
unleash a large-scale military operation in Gaza Strip if the Palestinians
didn't free the Israeli soldier they captured last June. "The military solution
will not be useful for the state of occupation, and Israel has to meet the
conditions of the factions that seized Corporal Gilad Shalit in order to restore
him back," said Hamad.
Captors of Shalit, led by Hamas, demand a prisoner
swap to exchange him with a number of the 10,000 Palestinian prisoner sheld in
Israel.
After the capture of Shalit, Hamad said Israel has
turned Gazain to a large prison, devastated vital facilities and bridges, and
killed hundreds of Palestinians without getting their objectives done.
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