Palestinian govt willing to step down for unity

Palestinian govt willing to step down for unity

February 11, 2016
Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah, pictured on April 21, 2015, is
Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah, pictured on April 21, 2015, is "ready to resign to support the formation of a national unity government" — AFP

RAMALLAH — The Palestinian government said on Tuesday it was ready to step down to enable a new national unity government, as rivals Fatah and Hamas engaged in a new reconciliation effort. Prime minister Rami Hamdallah was "ready to resign to support the formation of a national unity government and to take every effort to achieve genuine reconciliation", a statement read.

The government is the remnant of the cabinet of independent technocrats that the West Bank-based Fatah and Gaza rulers Hamas agreed on in 2014 when they announced their reconciliation. But the unity government has been ineffective and essentially barred from operating in Gaza, with president Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah and the Islamist Hamas long at loggerheads.

Tuesday's new declaration of a willingness to resign, coming after two days of talks between Fatah and Hamas in the Qatari capital Doha, was not the first time the government has proposed such a move.

Hamas also said it was "ready to form a new unity government without preconditions.”

Hamas accuses Fatah of preventing the government from regulating the salaries of its 50,000 employees who have been on the books since the Islamists seized power in Gaza in 2007.

Fatah accuses Hamas of maintaining a rival government and refusing to cede the management of Gaza's borders.

Nickolay Mladenov, UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, welcomed the Doha meeting, saying the world body "supports all efforts undertaken to advance genuine reconciliation on the basis of non-violence, democracy and PLO principles". — AFP


February 11, 2016
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