Israel rejects new Palestinian government: Minister

Israel's foreign minister says new Palestinian unity government including Hamas would be setback to peace attempts.


Afp February 10, 2012

UNITED NATIONS: Israel's foreign minister told UN envoys on Thursday that a new Palestinian unity government including Hamas would be a setback to peace attempts, diplomats said.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman briefed 15 UN envoys, including nine Security Council ambassadors, on the Middle East peace talks and the growing confrontation with Iran in a meeting at a New York hotel.

Lieberman said an accord signed this week by the heads of Fatah and Hamas "does not contribute to the advancement of peace negotiations or the well being of the Palestinian people," Israel's UN mission said in a statement.

Fatah, which is led by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, and Hamas, the militant group which rules Gaza, signed an accord which calls for a government of "independent technocrats" to oversee reconstruction in Gaza and to "facilitate" new elections in the Palestinian territories.

So far there is no suggestion that Hamas will have a role in the interim government.

Lieberman said the accord "reflects the personal interests" of Abbas and Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal, the Israeli mission added.

"Israel will not accept a Palestinian government that includes Hamas, unless it changes its current policies, recognizes Israel's right to exist and accepts all Quartet conditions," Lieberman said.

Talks between Israel and the Palestinians have been frozen since September 2010. The Palestinians have demanded that Israel halt settlement construction in the Palestinian territories. Israel rejects any conditions for talks to settle the Middle East conflict.

Lieberman, who is on a US tour which included meetings in Washington with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, also demanded that the Security Council act on Iran, the statement said.

"Israel keeps all options on the table" if international sanctions do not convince Iran to halt its nuclear drive, Lieberman said.

Western countries say Iran is trying to build a nuclear bomb and many experts say Israel is planning for a pre-emptive military strike against Tehran's nuclear installations. Iran denies it is seeking an atomic weapon.

Lieberman called on the Security Council to act on statements by Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who have made calls "to wipe Israel off the map," the Israeli mission said.

The meeting was attended by ambassadors from Britain, Germany, Russia, India, South Africa, Portugal, Azerbaijan, Guatemala, Italy, Singapore, the Czech Republic, Poland, Ethiopia, the Netherlands and Togo, the mission said.

COMMENTS (3)

Ahmed | 12 years ago | Reply

I reject israel's terrorist government and its continued occupation of Palestine. israel is the biggest threat to Pakistan and the world and is the most hated country in the world for good reason.

John Saudino | 12 years ago | Reply What do you expect the Palestinians to do? You refuse to stop making facts on the ground by settling the land you are supposed to be negotiating about, you make them reveal their territorial bargaining points in Jordan and refuse to betray your own, you defey even the united states by settling everything and making a joke of any negotionations...and now you cry boo hoo that Fatah is uniting with Hamas!!! You have had more than FIVE YEARS to make a separate peace with Fatah but you make a farce out of every attempt at negotiation for the two state solution that you PRETEND that you want and laugh at everyone behind their backs... So now you have driven Fatah into the arms of Hamas...CONGRATULATIONS .... soon Egypt will become another Iran, Hisbollah will take over Lebanon and Turkey will join them and then there will be a war that you cant win! Even WITH the United States.... Why dont you just stop building the settlements!!??????
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