[Mb-civic] Hamas Is Alone In Cabinet Plan - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Mar 20 03:56:56 PST 2006
Hamas Is Alone In Cabinet Plan
Other Factions Balk at Joining Government
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, March 20, 2006; A08
JERUSALEM, March 19 -- Hamas finalized a proposed cabinet Sunday that
would place several key ministries in the hands of senior leaders but
not include any other Palestinian faction, precisely the narrowly
partisan government that the radical Islamic movement had hoped to avoid.
Ismail Haniyeh, the designated prime minister, submitted the list to
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, whose secular Fatah party declined to
join the cabinet. The cabinet's makeup is likely to complicate efforts
to persuade international donors to continue funding the government once
Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the United States and
European Union, assumes control of the ministries.
"Their task was to have as wide a government as possible with Fatah,
other factions and independents," said Ali Jarbawi, a political science
professor at Beir Zeit University in the West Bank. "The cabinet they
have proposed will be, in effect, all Hamas. They are facing a deep
problem."
Also Sunday, the U.S. ambassador to Israel assembled Israeli and
Palestinian delegations to discuss mounting humanitarian problems in the
Gaza Strip resulting from closures of the main cargo passage with
Israel. The Karni crossing has been shut for most of the year because of
Israeli security concerns, but shortages of food and medicine are
beginning to threaten the welfare of Gaza's 1.3 million residents.
Richard Jones, the U.S. ambassador, called the meeting in Tel Aviv on a
few hours' notice to salvage a U.S.-brokered deal setting out the terms
of operation at Karni following Israel's withdrawal from Gaza last fall.
In recent weeks, Israeli officials have made clear they want the
Palestinians to use a southern passage at the intersection of Gaza,
Israel and Egypt, far from the strip's economic center in the north,
rather than Karni.
Palestinian officials had refused, citing terms of the deal. But the
delegations decided Sunday to open the southern passage, known as Kerem
Shalom, on Monday for humanitarian deliveries from Egypt.
"The ambassador took the initiative to bring the parties together to
find a way to move humanitarian assistance into Gaza in a way that
addressed security concerns on both sides," said Stewart Tuttle, the
U.S. Embassy spokesman.
Haniyeh's proposed cabinet, which was due by the end of the month, could
change in the weeks ahead. Hamas will probably continue seeking partners
to broaden its domestic support and assuage international donors, who
supply nearly half of the Palestinian Authority's roughly $2 billion
annual budget.
Abbas has demanded that Hamas accept several signed agreements backed by
his Fatah party that would, in effect, amount to a recognition of
Israel. Although Palestinian law does not give him the authority to veto
the proposed cabinet, Abbas could fire Haniyeh immediately after it is
sworn in by the Hamas-dominated legislature elected in January.
Hamas leaders so far have rejected Abbas's demands and pledged to
continue confronting Israel "by all means." Abbas's aides have indicated
in recent days that he will give Hamas a chance to run the ministries
while working to persuade its leaders to endorse a negotiated two-state
solution to the conflict.
Abbas will likely wait a few weeks to forward the proposed cabinet to
parliament, the Palestinian Legislative Council. The delay would allow
Israeli elections on March 28 to conclude before Hamas takes control of
the ministries, a transition that could otherwise boost the showing of
Israel's most hawkish parties. It would also give Haniyeh more time to
recruit another Palestinian party for the cabinet, ideally Fatah, which
controls the second-largest parliamentary bloc.
Haniyeh came close to bringing in the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, a Marxist party that, like Hamas, appears on the U.S. list
of foreign terrorist organizations. But the leaders of the party, which
holds three of parliament's 132 seats, announced Sunday that they would
not participate.
The Palestinian Authority is already in severe financial straits.
International donors are considering ways of financing humanitarian
programs for the Palestinians outside channels controlled by Hamas,
whose charter calls for Israel's destruction.
Israel has frozen the monthly transfer of about $55 million in tax and
customs revenue it collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority under
an arrangement established by the 1993 Oslo accords. Those transfers
amount to roughly half of the authority's $115 million monthly payroll
for 150,000 civil servants and trainees, nearly half of them in the
security services.
Hamas officials said Haniyeh's cabinet, which was not made public, gives
the interior and foreign ministries to members of the party, formally
known as the Islamic Resistance Movement. But many of those nominated to
run the 24 ministries are technocrats from outside the movement,
although they have strong ideological connections to it.
Saed Siyam, a former teacher who won the most votes on the Hamas list in
Gaza, has been nominated as interior minister with control of several
Palestinian security services. Mahmoud Zahar, a thyroid surgeon and
hard-liner, would run the Foreign Ministry, although Haniyeh has
signaled that Abbas will be given wide latitude in dealing with foreign
governments.
Haniyeh, considered a pragmatic figure within the movement, has been
working since soon after the party's parliamentary victory to form a
broad cabinet. But some Palestinian analysts say Hamas would have had a
better chance of building a national unity government if it had selected
a figure from outside the movement as prime minister.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/19/AR2006031901014.html?nav=hcmodule
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