Fabius says PA president wants next cabinet to include only members who recognize Israel, renounce violence

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (L) meets with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 21, 2015 (Flash90)
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (L) meets with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 21, 2015 (Flash90)

 

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Sunday told visiting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius that any new Palestinian unity government should not include Hamas, France’s top diplomat said.

The remarks came on the eve of a key meeting of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) to discuss forming a new cabinet after the government collapsed this week amid a deepening rift with Hamas, the de facto rulers of the Gaza Strip.

Abbas is thought to be seeking to replace the government of technocrats — formed last year to overcome rivalry between Palestinian factions — with a government of politicians.

“(Abbas) told me this government of national unity could only include women and men who recognize Israel, renounce violence and who are in agreement with the principles of the (Mideast) Quartet,” Fabius said at a press conference in Jerusalem after holding talks with Abbas in Ramallah.

Noting that those conditions ruled out Hamas, Fabius added: “And that suits us perfectly.”

The Islamist Hamas group has been designated a terrorist organization by the European Union and the United States.

Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and the ministers of Palestinian unity government meet with top Hamas leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, in Gaza City, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2014 (photo credit: AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and the ministers of Palestinian unity government meet with top Hamas leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, in Gaza City, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2014 (photo credit: AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

 

The Palestinian unity agreement signed in April 2014 had sought to end seven years of bad blood between Abbas’s Fatah movement and Hamas.

Abbas’s move to dissolve the government came at a critical time, with Hamas sources saying it is holding separate, indirect talks with Israel on ways to firm up an informal ceasefire that last August ended a 50-day war in Gaza.

It was not immediately clear whether the government’s collapse on Wednesday was directly linked to the talks.

Fabius said he had asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the contacts with Hamas.

“If I understood his response, it means that somehow, I don’t know how, there are conversations about Gaza and about improving the humanitarian situation” in the blockaded territory, Fabius said.

Sunday’s meetings in Ramallah and Jerusalem were part of efforts by Fabius aimed at reviving Israeli-Palestinian peace talks that have been comatose since a major US push for a final deal ended in failure last year.

As part of that effort, Fabius has been pushing for a United Nations Security Council resolution on Palestinian statehood which Israel is likely to oppose. But the French diplomat said Sunday Paris did not mean to impose a solution.

He said he detected general willingness on both sides to resume negotiations, and called for the creation of an international monitoring mechanism — which would, for the first time, include Arab states — to facilitate the process.

He also said France would not try to pass the resolution at the UN if it were certain the United States would veto it, though he suggested that Washington might not make use of its veto right.

As reported by The Times of Israel