Gaza power-sharing deal moves ahead with Parliament meeting

Gaza power-sharing deal moves ahead with Parliament meeting
Lawmakers from Hamas and Fatah, affiliated with exiled former Gaza strongman Mohammed Dahlan, wait for his speech via video conference from his office in the United Arab Emirates, during the first meeting together at the Gaza's parliament building in Gaza City, on Thursday. (AP)
Updated 28 July 2017
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Gaza power-sharing deal moves ahead with Parliament meeting

Gaza power-sharing deal moves ahead with Parliament meeting

GAZA CITY: Rival Palestinian lawmakers came together for the first time in a decade on Thursday in Gaza’s Parliament, the latest sign that an emerging Gaza power-sharing deal between the territory’s Hamas rulers and a former Gaza strongman is moving forward.
Mohammed Dahlan, a former Gaza security chief and Hamas rival, praised the new partnership, addressing the gathering by video conference from his exile in the UAE.
“We have made mutual efforts with our brothers in Hamas to restore hope for Gaza’s heroic people,” Dahlan told the lawmakers.
The gathering included dozens of legislators from Hamas, several Dahlan backers from the Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and independents.
Fatah legislators loyal to Abbas stayed away from the meeting, underscoring the deepening rift in the movement. Dahlan fell out with Abbas in 2010.
The legislature has been idled since Hamas routed pro-Abbas forces, then under Dahlan’s command, and took over Gaza in 2007.
Over the past decade, only Hamas lawmakers met in Parliament to pass resolutions concerning Gaza.
Abbas, who administers parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, stayed away from Gaza.
In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Dahlan revealed that the power-sharing deal with Hamas to ease an Israeli-Egyptian blockade on Gaza, help resolve an acute power shortage and pay reparations to hundreds of families who lost members during Hamas-Fatah infighting.
In recent months, Abbas has taken severe measures against Gaza to squeeze Hamas and force it to cede control, slashing salaries of former Palestinian Authority public servants there, asking Israel to scale back electricity supplies and reducing other services.
Hamas, short on options and allies, sought help from Dahlan.
Dahlan persuaded Egypt to deliver fuel shipments for Gaza’s small power plant and rehabilitate Gaza’s gate to the outside world, the Rafah crossing, which is to reopen by September.
Khalil Al-Hayeh, a senior Hamas official, said his movement supports the understandings because they will improve conditions in Gaza.
Osama Qawasmi, a Fatah spokesman and Abbas loyalist, said Thursday’s meeting reflects “small, personal, temporary partisan interests and we feel pity for this level of Hamas’ relations.”