The report quoted an
Egyptian official as saying that delegations from Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction and the Islamic militant group Hamas,
which dominates Gaza, would meet on Monday "to complete the Palestinian
reconciliation". The
official said Palestinian negotiators would then meet with their Israeli
counterparts starting on Wednesday to continue talks on a ceasefire in
Gaza that resulted from Egyptian-mediated talks in Cairo last month. Israel's delegation will travel to Cairo on Tuesday, an Israeli official said. Azzam
Ahmed, a Fatah official and head of the Palestinian delegation to last
month's talks, confirmed the plan for reconciliation talks to take place
this week. He said he expected negotiations with Israel to follow, in comments reported by the Palestinian WAFA news agency. Fifty days of conflict between Hamas and Israel,
which ended in August, have left large parts of Gaza in ruins. More
than 2,100 Palestinians, most of them civilians, were killed in the
fighting, according to the Gaza health ministry. Sixty-seven
Israeli soldiers and six civilians in Israel were also killed. Israel
launched the offensive on July 8 with the declared aim of halting
cross-border rocket salvoes by Hamas and other militant groups. Israel
considers Hamas a terrorist organisation while Hamas does not recognise
Israel's right to exist. At last month's talks, the two sides did not
meet face-to-face but conducted their negotiations through Egyptian
officials who shuttled back and forth. BLOCKADE The Palestinians want an end to the blockade of Gaza by Israel and Egypt,
which view Hamas as a security threat and are seeking guarantees that
weapons will not enter the small, densely populated territory of 1.8
million people. The
Palestinians are expected to press for construction of a sea port for
Gaza and Israel's release of Hamas prisoners in the occupied West Bank,
possibly in a trade for the remains of two Israeli soldiers believed to
be held by Hamas. Fatah
and Hamas, whose popularity soared in Gaza after the fighting, appeared
to have healed a bitter seven-year-old rift in April when they announced
plans to form a unity government with agreed policies. But tensions have grown in recent weeks. The
ceasefire struck last month included stipulations that Abbas's
Palestinian Authority should take over civil administration in Gaza from
Hamas. Hamas thought
that would mean its 40,000 employees in Gaza, who have not been paid for
months, would be taken care of via the Palestinian Authority payroll. But
Fatah is loath to give any support to Hamas until it stops running what
Abbas has described as a "shadow government" in Gaza and commits itself
fully to the agreed unity government. In
addition, international donors including the European Union who support
the PA budget first want a thorough audit of workers, and cutbacks to
the bloated payroll. Three
weeks ago, Israel's internal security service said it had foiled a
Hamas plot to launch a coup in the West Bank, an allegation Hamas
denied. Fatah also
accused Hamas of putting hundreds of its supporters in Gaza under house
arrest during the war, and shooting at those who tried to flee Israeli
bombings.
(Reuters) - Egypt
will host talks between rival Palestinian factions within days,
followed by indirect negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis on
the ceasefire in Gaza, the state news agency MENA said on Saturday.
Egypt to host Palestinian-Israeli Gaza talks in days: state news agency
Reuters
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