Israel, Palestine 'should be one'
By Donwald Pressly
10/16/06 "iafrica" -- -- The State of Palestine had already
accepted the two-state solution with Israel where it could live
in peace, but ultimately one state embracing both Jews and Arabs
was the best option, Palestinian Ambassador Ali Ahmed Halimeh
said on Monday.
Speaking to the Cape Town Press Club, the ambassador — who
publicly acknowledged that he was from the Fatah faction in the
country, rather than the new predominant Hamas ruling party —
said: "We are cousins (referring to the Arabic speakers and the
Jews). The only way out now in the long run, honestly ... the
best for all of us is to live together. We can make the best
country of it."
Pointing to the audience — including a sizeable Jewish lobby —
he said South Africa had shown the way that differing groups
could live together, congregate in the same room and do business
and travel together. "Why can't we do it?" he said.
He hinted strongly that President Mahmoud Abbas — elected
president before Hamas took power earlier this year — could use
his constitutional power to reconstitute the government of
Palestine.
Asked specifically if there were elements in Hamas which could
be won over to recognising the state of Israel and accepting
international agreements signed by the Fatah/Palestine
Liberation Organisation government of the late Yasser Arafat, he
said he believed there were such elements.
There was truth in the view that there was a more moderate wing
of Hamas within Palestine and a more radical wing without its
borders — which did not wish to compromise.
The ambassador — appointed by Abbas rather than the new
government earlier this year — said any change in the government
in Palestine would have to be based on all the commitments
already made — agreements with the international community and
Israel.
Negotiations about the future had to take place between
Palestine and Israel while Israel had to come to the party by,
for instance, dealing with 10 000 Palestinians who were in its
jails. He said attacks on innocent Palestinians also needed to
end.
He accused the Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Almert of "stupid
politics" — wanting to attack Gaza after losing the battle in
Lebanon, but not before destroying much of that country's
infrastructure.
Halimeh acknowledged that there was "a serious political crisis"
in the region, but Palestine could not allow the current
standoff — with financial flows from the outside world to
underpin the government having been turned off by the United
States and much of Europe — to continue.
He said "We want to have a form of government that can run the
affairs of the Palestinians."
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