BETHLEHEM, Aug. 11 (Xinhua) -- Fourteen new leaders, most of them from the
young generation, joined the 18-member Fatah central committee, according to the
initial voting result released Tuesday morning.
Eleven candidates have been confirmed to be winners and three others are
still waiting a confirmation at a final tally.
The following is the introduction of 11 new leaders.
Mohammed Ighniem, a main Fatah leader, is better known as Abu Maher Ghunim.
He preserved his seat in the central committee and gained the largest number of
1,338 ballots among the more than 2,000 votes.
He used to be exiled until Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas obtained a
permission from Israel to let Ghunim in the West Bank to join the general
convention. He returned last month and plans to stay in the Palestinian
territories. He is widely considered as possible Abbas' successor in the future.
Mahmoud al-Aloul, who won 1,112 votes after Ghunim, used to be Nablus city
governor since 1995 and now he is a member of the Palestinian Legislative
Council (PLC).
Marwan al-Barghouthi, an outspoken young Fatah leader, was born in 1958
near the West Bank city of Ramallah. He has been serving since 2004 a life
sentence in an Israeli prison until now for charges of planning attacks aimed to
kill Israelis. However, he denies the accusations.
Mohammed Dahlan, a former security chief who fled the Gaza Strip when
Islamic Hamas movement seized the territory in 2007, is seen as Hamas' bitter
foe. The Islamic movement said it can not deal with Dahlan under any position.
He was behind the crackdown the Palestinian National Authority (PNA)
launched against Hamas in Gaza in the mid-1990s and Hamas blames him for
plotting a coup against it after the Islamic movement won the parliamentary
elections in 2006.
Two other former security chiefs from the West Bank won seats in Fatah's
highest body, Tawfiq al-Tirawi, the general intelligence chief and Jebril
al-Rejoub, Dahlan's former counterpart in the West Bank who now heads the
Palestinian Football Federation (PFF).
Saeb Erekat, a Fatah lawmaker and a veteran peace negotiator, joined almost
every Palestinian mission to negotiate with Israel due to his position as head
of the negotiation affairs in the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO).
Nasser al-Qudwa, born in Gaza in 1959, is the nephew of Yasser Arafat, the
late Fatah founder and former president of PNA. Al-Qudwa served as Palestinian
envoy in the United Nations and foreign affairs minister until Hamas won the
elections in 2006.
Hussein al-Sheikh, is the director of civil liaison agency which
coordinates between the PNA and Israel over civilian interests and daily life
events.
Azzam al-Ahmad, chief of Fatah bloc in the Palestinian parliament and
leader of Fatah delegation to reconciliation talks with Islamic Hamas movement.
Sultan Abu el-Einein, representative of Fatah in Lebanon, is the only
central committee member based outside the Palestinian territories.
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