Abbas fights political battles for statehood

Mon Jan 21, 2008 11:45pm GMT
 
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By Wafa Amr

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - President Mahmoud Abbas, politically weakened by the loss of the Gaza Strip to Hamas Islamists, is waging a two-front battle in his quest for a deal with Israel on Palestinian statehood.

His efforts, spurred by the United States, have been complicated by rocket attacks on Israel by militants in the Gaza Strip and an Israeli closure of the territory's borders that have raised fears of a humanitarian crisis.

"He is fighting one battle to end the Palestinian split caused by Hamas' coup in Gaza, in order to continue his path to achieve Palestinian national goals embodied in Palestinian independence," said Hassan Asfour, a former Palestinian negotiator, using Abbas's term for the Gaza takeover.

The other obstacle he faces, Asfour said, is Israel's more narrow concept of the type of agreement it hopes to reach with Abbas before U.S. President George W. Bush leaves office in January 2009.

Abbas seeks a full peace treaty and wants to declare a Palestinian state by the end of this year.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert however, wants a general "framework" accord in that timeframe that would not end with a statehood declaration but would outline how key issues such as Jerusalem, Jewish settlements, Palestinian refugees and borders, would be resolved.

Israel and the Palestinians opened their first serious peace talks in seven years last week, with Bush urging those core issues be tackled.

But like Abbas, whose Fatah faction lost control of the Gaza Strip to Hamas in fighting in June, Olmert also has been weakened by domestic problems.  Continued...

 

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