Abbas' aides talk about delaying elections (AP) Updated: 2005-12-22 08:49
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas' aides talked openly Wednesday about the
possibility of postponing Jan. 25 parliament elections that pit the ruling Fatah
Party against the increasingly popular Islamic militant group Hamas.
The aides cited Israel's threat to ban voting in Jerusalem for the potential
delay, denying that was merely an excuse to put off what could be a trouncing at
the polls. Postponing or even canceling the elections could serve the interests
of Abbas and the Israelis, but both sides dismissed speculation they were in
this together.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas attends
Friday prayers in the West Bank city of Ramallah on December 16, 2005.
[Reuters] | In Gaza, Palestinian gunmen released
two teachers, a Dutchman and an Australian, shortly after abducting them on
their way to school Wednesday �� the latest in a rash of bloodless kidnappings
that have helped undermine Abbas.
Hamas, entering a parliamentary race for the first time, expects to
capitalize on Abbas' inept rule and the internal bickering that has split his
Fatah Party. Israel is alarmed at the possibility that Hamas could do well in
the voting or even win. Both would welcome a way to reduce the influence of
Hamas, responsible for dozens of suicide bombings that have killed hundreds of
Israelis.
Palestinians hurl stones at an Israeli army
vehicle during an Israeli incursion searching for militants in the West
Bank town of Jenin Wednesday Dec. 21, 2005.
[AP] | Israeli officials said that unlike past
elections, the 200,000 Palestinians who live in east Jerusalem would not be
allowed to vote �� part of Israel's objection to Hamas' taking part in the
elections.
Raanan Gissin, an aide to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, told The
Associated Press no final decision had been made.
But Gissin said allowing Palestinians to vote in Jerusalem post offices for
parliamentary elections in 1996 and again this year, when Abbas was elected to
succeed the late Yasser Arafat, were exceptions to the rule banning Palestinian
political activity in Jerusalem.
"The situation today is totally different," Gissin said, citing Hamas
participation. "We don't want any political activity with voting for Hamas in
east Jerusalem."
Palestinian Information Minister Nabil Shaath said that would be enough
reason to call off the vote. "If the Israelis insist on not allowing us to
conduct the elections in Jerusalem, then there will be no elections at all,"
Shaath said.
While ostensibly a minor procedural matter, voting in Jerusalem is of great
symbolic importance for Israel and the Palestinians, as a measure of claims to
the eastern sector. The Palestinians want to establish their capital in east
Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast War and later annexed to
its capital.
Dutch Hendrik Taatgen, centre, the school
principal of the American International School in Beit Lahia, in northern
Gaza, and his Australian deputy, Brian Ambrosio, right, are seen after
their release inside the Gaza City office of Palestinian leader Mahmoud
Abbas Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2005.[AP] | Speaking to
the AP from Beirut, senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said the Jerusalem issue
could be resolved in a "compromise among Palestinian factions rather than
postponing elections." He said if Abbas puts off the elections, it would be an
admission that Hamas would win.
Abbas already postponed elections once, from July 17, a date that coincided
with Israel's Gaza pullout.
Visiting Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman hinted Wednesday that the
elections might be delayed. After he met Abbas, his aides said a decision would
be made in about week.
Hamas' strength has been bolstered by Abbas' inability to take control of the
streets of Gaza following Israel's summer pullout.
On Wednesday, Palestinian gunmen briefly abducted Dutch school principal
Hendrik Taatgen and his Australian deputy, Brian Ambrosio, as they drove to work
at the American International School near Gaza City.
The armed men stopped the foreigners' blue Honda Civic about a mile from the
school, forced them out of their car, bundled them into another vehicle and
drove off, witnesses said.
A claim of responsibility, faxed to the AP, called for the release of Ahmed
Saadat, a leader of the radical Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
who is held under foreign supervision in a Palestinian prison in the West Bank
town of Jericho. Saadat is in custody for the PFLP's assassination of an Israeli
Cabinet minister in 2001.
The hostages were released shortly after the fax arrived.
In the West Bank, a local Hamas leader in the town of Jenin was killed during
a shootout with Israeli troops who were trying to arrest him, the militant group
and witnesses said. The military confirmed it was operating in
Jenin.
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