Don't 'Hurry' to Back Palestinian Govt, Israel PM Warns

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

World governments should not rush to approve the new Palestinian government, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Sunday after the Palestinians accused Israel of looking to punish them over a unity deal. 

"I call on all responsible elements within the international community not to hurry to recognize the Palestinian government that Hamas is part of, and which relies on Hamas," Netanyahu told ministers at the weekly cabinet meeting, saying it would "strengthen terror".

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has said the new government, which is to be sworn in at his Muqataa headquarters in Ramallah on Monday, will be a government of political independents that will reject violence, recognise Israel and abide by all existing agreements. 

Although the formal line-up has not yet been made public, it has been pieced together by Abbas' Fatah movement and Gaza's Islamist Hamas rulers in accordance with a reconciliation agreement inked in April. Technocratic in nature, it will not have a political mandate.

Israel has described the unity deal as a blow to peace and vowed to boycott it.

In a move which further underscored Israel's opposition to the new government which will take office on Monday, three Gazans who were to travel to the West Bank to be sworn in as ministers were blocked from leaving the coastal enclave, officials said.

 

- Government boycott -

 

Speaking late on Saturday, Abbas said Israel had informed him it would cut all ties with the incoming government, in what he described as punishing the Palestinians for overcoming their years-long internal political differences.

"Israel wants to punish us for agreeing with Hamas on this government," he said, explaining that it had been made clear to him that the Netanyahu administration would "boycott the government the moment it is announced".

But the Palestinians would have an answer for every Israeli move, he warned.

"Each Israeli step will have a proper Palestinian response," he said, without elaborating. 

"We will take everything step-by-step, we will not be the ones to react first."

He appeared to be alluding to Palestinian intentions to seek further recognition for their promised state in the international diplomatic arena.

 

- Stuck in the Strip -

 

Earlier, a senior Palestinian official said Israel had blocked the passage of three Gazans who were to have been sworn in as ministers in the new government.

The three had applied to cross to the West Bank on Thursday, but their application was immediately rejected.

"We sent the application in on Thursday and explained that these officials are to be sworn in as ministers in Ramallah, but Israel immediately rejected the application," he told AFP on condition of anonymity.

COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry unit responsible for Palestinian civilian coordination, refused to comment on the matter, as did Netanyahu's office.

Earlier, public radio said COGAT head Major General Yoav Mordechai had vetoed the request, without saying why.

On April 23, rival Palestinian leaders in the West Bank and the Hamas-run Gaza Strip announced a surprise unity deal, pledging to work together to set up an interim government of political independents.

Israel immediately halted the crisis-hit peace talks, vowing it would never talk to any government backed by Hamas, whose charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish state.

The new government, which will pave the way for long-overdue legislative and presidential elections, will be chaired by Rami Hamdallah, who is currently serving as prime minister in the Fatah-dominated West Bank administration.

Comments 4
Thumb kanaanljdid 01 June 2014, 10:52

Where do you live? Europe? USA? How can you tell people how they should live? They are bound to live with the Israelis so they cooperate with them. It's easy to encourage war from far away when you don't have to undergo it's consequences.

Missing phillipo 01 June 2014, 16:41

Over 66 Years ago, on 29th November 1947 to be exact, the UN General Assembly had before it a resolution calling for the establishment of 2 Independent states in the British Mandate of Palestine. The vote was 33 in favour 13 against. The Jews accept the partition plan, the Arab States refused to accept it, so when you say "the Israeli entity wiped Palestine off the map 66 years ago" this is not true, it was the Arab States, speaking for the Palestinians who refused to accept the situation.

Missing phillipo 01 June 2014, 16:46

The Israelis offered Arafat 98% of the West Bank for the State of Palestine to exist in peace besides the State of Israel. The offer was repeated on more than one occasion, but Arafat managed to miss time and time again the opportunity to set up his Independent State, and now Abu Mazen carries on in the same vein.
Would you agree to relations with an entity (Hamas) who day after day threaten to wipe your country off the map? I very much doubt it.

Missing phillipo 01 June 2014, 16:51

Could you imagine a case in any Arab State where the head of a radical organisation calls repeatedly for the destruction of the state and remain free to carry on his rantings. This is what happens in Israel to the leader of the Northern Front situated in Umm al-Fahm.
Whilst you are at it ask the Arab judge of the Israeli Supreme Court.