CAIRO, April 27 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas Friday evening met here with the exiled head of Hamas's political
bureau Khaled Meshaal to probe means of stabilizing the truce and lifting siege
imposed on the Palestinians.
Top on the agenda of the talks between Abbas and
Meshaal were the domestic situation including stabilizing the truce, prisoners
exchange deal with Israel and lifting siege; the political partnership between
Fatah and Hamas launched by the Mecca agreement; and means of reactivating the
Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), the Egyptian MENA news agency quoted
a well-informed Palestinian official as saying.
During the meeting, Abbas and Meshaal reiterated
their commitment to the Mecca agreement, exerting every possible effort to
stabilize the current truce and extending it to the West Bank as well as working
with Arab and Islamic countries to lift the siege, which was imposed by the West
on the previous Hamas-led government since it took office in March 2006 for its
refusal to recognize Israel and past Israeli-Palestinian agreements.
This is the first meeting between Abbas and Meshaal,
who arrived here late Friday and Thursday night respectively, since a
Palestinian unity government took office on March 17 after a power-sharing
agreement was reached in Saudi Arabia on Feb. 8.
The meeting came as Palestinian-Israeli tensions
escalated after Israel launched military operations in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip and Hamas fired a barrage of rockets earlier in the week and declared
a five-month cease-fire over.
Having wrapped up a European tour to persuade Europe
to resume aid and dealings with the Palestinian government, Abbas is paying a
two-day visit to Egypt.
Abbas is scheduled to meet with Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak on Saturday Morning to discuss the latest developments in the
Palestinian territories, the outcomes of his European tour and the recent
meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, as well as efforts to halt
Israeli aggressions and reviving peace process in the Middle East.