Special Report:
Palestine-Israel Conflicts
RAMALLAH, April 1 (Xinhua) -- A
majority of Palestinians want any upcoming government to conform to all deals
the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) has signed, according to a poll
released on Wednesday.
According to the poll, which involved 900
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and West Bank, 63 percent said they want the
government to adhere to the agreements the PNA signed, while the rest believe
the agreements are not binding to the upcoming government.
The survey was conducted by the Ramallah-based Near
East Consulting Company between March 28-30, on the eve of the resumption of the
unity and reconciliation talks between the Islamic Hamas movement and President
Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement.
Hamas and Fatah have agreed on forming a transitional
unity government but are still debating on its obligations with Hamas refusing
to approve any government that recognizes Israel. Hamas also declined to abide
by the peace deals signed between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation
Organization (PLO).
Meanwhile, the majority of the respondents, 73
percent, said they want the formation of a unity government, while 16 percent
said the government can be formed based on an understanding compromise.
Eight percent demanded a government in which Fatah
holds the majority of the portfolios, while only 3 percent want a
Hamas-dominated government, according to the survey.
Fifty-six percent of the polled believe the ongoing
unity talks between Hamas and Fatah in Cairo would lead to reconciliation.
Seventy percent of the Palestinians would blame both Hamas and Fatah for a
failure, while 20 percent would blame Hamas and 10 percent blame Fatah.
On Wednesday, representatives of Hamas and Fatah
resumed their talks in Cairo, hoping to reach an agreement on the outstanding
issues. Their talks focus on forming a unity government, reforming the security
services, reforming the PLO and holding elections to boost reconciliation.