Gaza City – Hamas Denies Running ‘Shadow Government’ In Gaza

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    Gaza City – The exiled leader of Hamas denied Friday that the Islamist movement was running a “shadow government” in Gaza as charged by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

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    Khaled Meshaal was speaking in the Tunisian capital days after Abbas threatened to break off a unity agreement with Hamas, saying it was not allowing the government to operate in the Gaza Strip.

    “There is a national unity government; talk of a parallel government is totally against reality,” Meshaal said after meeting Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki.

    He said government ministries were still “operating normally” in Gaza even if the “government is absent from” the coastal enclave and urged the cabinet to be present.

    “We welcome the government of national unity to work in Gaza, to take charge of crossing points and assume all its responsibilities in line with what we agreed upon.”

    In April, Hamas agreed to work with its rivals in Abbas’s Fatah movement to form an interim consensus government of technocrats which would work towards long-delayed national elections.

    The deal sought to end years of bitter and sometimes bloody rivalry between Hamas and Fatah, which dominates the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority.

    The new cabinet took office on June 2, with Gaza’s Hamas government officially stepping down the same day.

    But last week Abbas accused Hamas of running a parallel administration in Gaza.

    “We won’t accept a partnership with them if the situation continues like this in Gaza, where there is a shadow government… running the territory,” he said.

    “The national consensus government cannot do anything on the ground,” he charged.

    On Monday Hamas accused Abbas of trying to sabotage the unity deal.

    The spat erupted after an open-ended ceasefire took effect in Gaza on August 26, ending a major 50-day conflict between Hamas and Israel.

    Talks between the two sides are due to resume in Egypt later this month to consolidate the truce.

    Exiled Hamas deputy leader Mussa Abu Marzuq on Thursday said the group could be forced to negotiate directly with Israel — something it has never done before.

    But Meshaal said this would not happen.

    “Direct negotiations with the Israeli occupier is not on the agenda of Hamas; if negotiations are necessary they must be indirect,” he said.


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    2 Comments
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    yankee96
    yankee96
    9 years ago

    hamas can deny all they want,but they have no credibility and even when caught in their lies,they continue to deny so it is sad and laughable at the same time.

    Israel should not wait any longer and together with Egypt , Jordan and the Saudis eliminate hamas once and for all.

    there is bigger fish to deal with,and time is of the essence

    5TResident
    Noble Member
    5TResident
    9 years ago

    See, this is how it is with Arabs. Not only do they lie to the world, they lie to each other. Of course Hamas is running its own government in Gaza.