The Daily Star, AFP, February 09, 2013
CAIRO:
Palestinian factions meeting in Cairo to seal a reconciliation deal between
Fatah and Hamas were to hold a second round of talks on Saturday after the
failure of initial efforts, delegates said.
The talks
are being held under the umbrella of the provisional governing body of the
Palestine Liberation Organisation, which is charged with bringing non-members
Hamas and Islamic Jihad into the PLO.
A round of
discussions on Friday night lasted eight hours.
"The
atmosphere was positive but we need another meeting to sort out some
interpretations and differences in point of view," Maher al-Taher, head of
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, told reporters.
PLO
executive committee member Wassel Abu Yussef said the main differences were
over polls to the Palestine National Council (PNC), the PLO's parliament, and
over legislative and presidential elections in the Palestinian territories.
"Fatah
wants the (transitional non-partisan) government (tasked with organising the
elections) formed at the same time as a decree setting the date for
elections," Abu Yussef explained.
"Hamas
wants the government to be formed first to end the division before the date of
elections is decided."
Also, Fatah
and independent figures in the PLO provisional governing body want the same
system to apply for the PNC and parliament, whereas Hamas wants proportional
representation within the Palestine National Council.
The
Islamist movement which rules Gaza wants a breakdown of 75 percent proportional
representation for polling in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and the rest under
a one-person, one-vote system.
Palestinian
president Mahmoud Abbas, who heads Fatah and the PLO, has convened the
conference of all Palestinian organisations in the Egyptian capital, where his
party and Hamas signed a reconciliation agreement on April 27, 2011.
Most of its
clauses have gone unheeded and deadlines have been postponed.
The PLO
provisional governing council met in Cairo for the first time in December 2011.
It includes PLO leaders and the heads of groups currently under its umbrella,
as well as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and independent personalities.
Hamas last
week authorised the Central Elections Commission to start registering voters in
the Gaza Strip, removing a major obstacle to reconciliation with Fatah.
The CEC
said voter registration will be carried out from February 11 to 18.
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