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نصر
لحماس و لكن مأساة للفلسطينيين بقلم:
دونالد ماسينتير الانديبندنت
- 15/6/2007 ان الحرب التي تدور في غزة تهدد
بإعادة رسم خريطة الشرق الأوسط A
triumph for Hamas... but
a tragedy for the Palestinians? A
war in By
Donald Macintyre in Published: The
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas dissolved the
"national unity government" last night and
sacked its Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh after an
especially savage day of internecine violence ended with
Hamas in control of the Gaza Strip. Mr
Abbas's move, which Fatah hopes will underpin its
dominance of the West Bank after the near-total defeat
of its forces in Gaza, underlined the growing separation
of the two Palestinian entities and prompted talk among
some Israeli analysts of a "three state
solution" involving Israel, Gaza and the West
Bank. Hamas
Radio underlined Mr Abbas's lack of control over Hamas's
internal grip on In
a decree announced by one of his senior aides, Tayeb
Abdel Rahim, in Ramallah and swiftly dismissed by
Hamas officials in But
it had been the battle for the headquarters of
Preventative Security in Television
pictures had earlier shown some of Hamas's Fatah
captives being marched along the street with their hands
in the air. The Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri denied
reports of executions and insisted: "Whoever was
killed was killed in clashes." He
added the Islamic group had been forced to wrest control
from Fatah because its security services were corrupt
and generated chaos. But a Fatah official said that
Hamas shot dead seven of its fighters outside the
building and a doctor at Neither
the official nor the medic were prepared to give their
names for fear of reprisals. A witness, Amjad, also
declined to give his full name when he told the
Associated Press from his home: "They are executing
them one by one. They are carrying one of them on their
shoulders, putting him on a sand dune, turning him
around and shooting." The
headquarters has a symbolic importance for Hamas beyond
its role as a key military bastion and the bloody
assault on the compound appeared to be in part a
settling of scores more than a decade old. It was
Preventative Security that spearheaded Yasser Arafat's
famous crackdown on his Hamas opponents in the
mid-1990s. It was also in this building that the
interrogations took place in which Hamas figures of the
time like Mahmoud Zahar who until a few months ago
was the Palestinian Foreign Minister are alleged to
have been humiliated and tortured by the Fatah forces. Some
of the masked Hamas gunmen kissed the ground after the
building was captured amid thankful cries of "Allah
Akbar". Hamas TV said the Preventive Security
building would be turned into an Islamic college and
displayed a room packed with what the station said was
wire-tapping equipment. The
attack came after five days of fighting which have cost
90 Palestinian lives and seen both sides carrying out
other summary executions, throwing opponents from the
upper floors of high-rise buildings, hijacking
ambulances to use as military vehicles, and engaging in
gunfire inside the precincts of hospitals. The
dire impact of the conflict on Mr
Haniyeh reaffirmed his belief in the national unity
government in a television broadcast early today and
insisted it would continue to the " best of its
abilities". He appealed once again for the release
of Alan Johnston, the kidnapped BBC journalist. And he
went out of his way to dismiss the idea that a separate
Palestinian state could be created in Fatah
leaders who were blamed by Mr Haniyeh for undermining
the national unity government came under criticism from
local commanders for absenting themselves from the Strip
during the fighting. In
the West Bank Fatah militants rounded up nearly 90 Hamas
fighters in the first such effort to reassert its
authority since the Arafat crackdown in 1996. Issam Abu
Bakr, a Fatah leader in the The
near-rout of Fatah in While
the former appeared ready to try to make the national
unity government work, the latter argued that it had
failed to achieve a lifting of the international
boycott. Israeli
officials were quoted as saying that Ehud Olmert would
tell President George Bush that In
fact, even in relatively peaceful times, Nevertheless
the Israeli hints suggested the possibility of a
"West Bank first" policy of trying to reach
agreements with Mr Abbas which ignore In
terms of progress to a long-term settlement there are
paradoxes in this approach, because there is little to
negotiate about over The
forces behind this eruption of violence Who
and what are Fatah and Hamas? Fatah,
formed in the 1950s by Yasser Arafat, started as an
armed liberation movement trying to take control of the
whole of historic Fatah
ran the Palestinian Authority set up under Oslo and lost
the PA elections partly because it was seen as
inefficient and corrupt, and arguably, partly because it
had failed to fulfil its ambition of a Palestinian
state. Hamas, formed in 1987 was a Palestinian offshoot
of the Muslim Brotherhood, committed then - and by its
charter now - to establishing an Islamic state in the
whole of historic It
gained popularity both through its commitment to armed
actions against It
has resolutely refused to recognise How
come they are fighting now if they are supposed to be in
government together? The
bitter rivalry between the two groups, partly compounded
by the refusal of elements in Fatah to accept the
results of the 2006 elections, had spilled into serious
violence, resulting in some 160 deaths, at the turn of
the year, an outbreak supposed to have been stopped by
the Saudi-brokered Mecca deal which formed the new
"national unity" coalition. But it was a
shotgun wedding, based on the deep desire of the
Palestinian population for security and the allocation
of ministerial posts rather than a joint political
programme. And second, it looks as though neither
Mahmoud Abbas the (Fatah) President or Ismail Haniyeh
the (Hamas) Prime Minister have been able to exercise
full control of their forces. How
did the latest round of fighting start? Almost
impossible to identify a single moment though there were
a number of incidents on 8 June, including the violent
kidnappings of two Hamas figures by Fatah gunmen, a
bodyguard to Mr Haniyeh and a doctor, who were
respectively beaten and shot and wounded. A
Fatah activist was also shot dead by Hamas gunmen after
they complained he had been among gunmen who attacked
Hamas supporters outside a mosque. But these incidents
were triggers rather than causes. http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2659712.ece ----------------- نشرنا
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