Adviser
to Abaas: "Palestinians need American money, but if
they use it as a way of pressuring us, we are ready to
relinquish that aid."
Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas is willing to give up hundreds of
millions of dollars of US aid if that is what is
necessary to forge a reconciliation deal with Hamas,
the Associated Press quoted his adviser as saying on
Monday.
Azzam Ahmed stated that "the Palestinians need
Americanmoney, but if
they use it as a way of pressuring us, we are ready
to relinquish that aid."
According to official Palestinian Authority news
agency WAFA, Abbas also requested that the
Palestinian Liberation Organization's (PLO)
Executive Committee convene the body's Constitution
Committee as quickly as possible, either in Amman or
Cairo, in order to begin drafting amendments to the
organization'scharter.
The committee first
convened in 2005 following the Cairo Declaration
which outlinedthe makeupof the
committee's members as well as its purpose and
goals. The declaration also stated that the
committee would be comprised of secretary generals
from all Palestinian factions, and that it would be
the sole representative of the Palestinian people.
Since 2005, the committee has not successfully
drafted amendments to the PLOcharter, and
has not convened since Hamas was elected to power in
2006.
Over the weekend, Abbas met with a Hamas delegation
from the West Bank in Ramallah to discuss ways of
ending the dispute between his Fatah faction and the
Islamist movement. It was the first such meeting in
more than a year.
It followed Abbas’s recent offer to visit the Gaza
Strip for talks with Hamas leaders on achieving
Palestinian unity.
The offer has divided Hamas leaders. While some have
welcomed it, others have announced that Abbas was
unwelcome in the Gaza Strip.
Abbas briefed the Hamas officials on his initiative,
saying it was aimed at discussing the formation of a
new government that consists of independent figures
to prepare for presidential and legislative
elections, and rebuild the Gaza Strip.
Hours after the meeting, a senior government
official said that Israel will stop dealing with the
Palestinian Authority if it brings Hamas into the
government.
“Abbas has to choose whether he wants peace with
Israel, or peace with Hamas,” the official said. “He
can’t have both. If he chooses peace with Hamas it
will bury the peace process.”
Khaled Abu Toameh
and Herb Keinon contributed to this report.