RAMALLAH, Nov. 2 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and three
senior Hamas officials prayed together on Friday noon in a mosque near Abbas'
headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, the first time since mid-June
when Hamas defeat Abbas' Fatah and seized the Gaza Strip.
The official Palestinian Satellite Television showed footage of Abbas and
three Hamas leaders, Nasser el-Dein Al-Sha'er, Sheikh Husein Abu Kweik and
Sheikh Ahmed Abu Ruman, prayed the weekly Friday prayers together.
It was the first time that Abbas and Hamas leaders met in one place, shook
hands and talked to each other since Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip in mid
June. The Friday prayers took place in a mosque in al-Muqata'a in Ramallah.
Palestinian sources at Abbas' headquarters described the meeting as
"fabulous and brotherly," but denied reports that official talks were held after
the end of the prayers between Abbas and the three Hamas leaders.
The prayer meeting came several hours after al-Sha'er dismissed recent
statements by his colleague in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, who said Hamas wished
to seize the West Bank as what it did in Gaza in mid-June.
Al-Sha'er, former deputy prime minister in the deposed Hamas-led
government, told reporters that such statements "are not realistic and just
represent their (Gaza Hamas senior members) personal point of views."
On Monday, senior Hamas official Nezzar Rayyan told a rally in Gaza that
Hamas could take the West Bank by force in the future.
"We said we would pray in al-Muntada (Abbas headquarters in Gaza) and we
did; now I say we will pray in al-Muqata'a (Abbas' compound) in (the West Bank
city) Ramallah on fall and we will," Rayyan said then.
"Hamas movement rejects the principle of getting again into any violent
infighting in the West Bank. We support the general attitude to achieving social
peace, security and settlement," said al-Sha'er.
He called on Abbas security forces to stop crackdown on the movement's
leaders and supporters and respect human rights in the West Bank "to avoid
creating a fertile ground of violence."