Special report: Internal situation in
Palestine
GAZA, Dec. 2 (Xinhua) -- A Hamas official on Saturday
blamed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' aides and his Fatah party for the
failure of the unity government talks.
Khalil al-Haiya, a Hamas lawmaker, also threatened
that the ruling party would not tolerate "any measures violating the law or
revolting against the Palestinian legitimacy and democracy for the benefit of
America or the Jewish state."
The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO),
dominated by Abbas' Fatah movement, announced on Friday the suspension of talks
between Hamas and Fatah which were aimed at reaching a deal to form a unity
government.
Al-Haiya said Fatah has first demanded to stop the
talks even before the departure of Prime Minister Ismail Haneya from the Hamas
movement.
The timing Haneya had selected to begin his first
regional tour since he took office as prime minister in March, was criticized by
observers since it would delay the birth of the unity government, which is
deemed by many as urgent to save the Palestinians from hardship resulted by the
western embargo on the Hamas-led government.
On Friday, Azzam al-Ahmad, chief of Fatah
parliamentary bloc, said Hamas did not offer new steps regarding the formation
of the government.
Taysser Khaled, a member of the PLO, said the failure
of the inter-Palestinian talks was expected because they were only limited to
the two movements of Hamas and Fatah, which for all their long-haul talks, "did
not agree on the form of the government or its political program."
Khaled also called for early elections or referendum
to be held to get the Palestinians out of the crisis.
Related story:
Palestinian national dialogue frozen,
crisis resurfaces
GAZA, Dec. 2 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas decided to freeze talks with the Hamas-led government on
forming a national unity one, in a sign of an intensifying power struggle
between Islamic militants and moderate President Mahmoud Abbas.