http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=131642&d=22&m=1&y=2010&pix=world.jpg&category=World

            Friday 22 January 2010 (06 Safar 1431)


                  'Hamas not for Israel's destruction'
                  Mohammed Mar'i | Arab News 
                    
                  RAMALLAH: A senior Hamas official has denied that his 
movement calls for the destruction of Israel.

                  Spokesman for Hamas' parliamentary bloc Salah El-Bardawil 
said in a press statement on Thursday that the party is simply concerned with 
restoring the rights of Palestinians.

                  "There is a difference between the restoration of Palestinian 
rights and the destruction of Israel," he added.

                  "We will not talk with the Israelis, but only with those who 
planted Israel in our region. We want the international forces that had planted 
this entity in our region to address the sin against the Palestinians." 

                  El-Bardawil was responding to remarks from Aziz Dwaik, Hamas' 
most senior representative in the West Bank, who said that the movement had 
accepted Israel's right to exist and would be prepared to nullify its charter, 
which according to him was drafted over 20 years ago.

                  Dwaik is the elected speaker for the Palestinian Legislative 
Council. He was released a few months ago after spending nearly three years in 
an Israeli prison.

                  "No one wants to throw anyone into the sea," the Israeli 
daily Jerusalem Post quoted Dwaik as saying on Wednesday.

                  Dwaik was speaking during a meeting held in Hebron with 
British millionaire David Martin Abrahams, who maintains close ties with senior 
Israeli and British government officials.

                  The Post's report claimed that Abrahams is scheduled to brief 
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband this weekend on the outcome of his 
meeting with Dwaik and other top Hamas officials in the West Bank.

                  Abrahams, a major donor to the governing Labour Party in 
Britain, told the paper he would urge Miliband to consider the implications of 
Hamas' apparent change of heart.

                  Dwaik also stressed that other Hamas leaders, including 
Damascus-based leader Khaled Mishaal and Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, 
have voiced support for the idea of establishing an independent Palestinian 
state within the pre-1967 boundaries.

                  Dwaik also expressed Hamas' desire to engage in dialogue with 
the international community, particularly the European Union. 

                  He confirmed that Hamas was receiving financial aid from 
Iran, but said that this was the direct result of a boycott and sanctions 
against the movement.

                  Abrahams said that he would be happy to facilitate a dialogue 
between Hamas and the international community, including Israel. He said he was 
"very excited" to hear from a senior Hamas leader in the West Bank that the 
movement would be prepared to change its position.

                  "The fact that there is a possibility for the recognition of 
Israel is a symbolic gesture," Abrahams added.

                  "We can all look for good in people and we can all look for 
bad in people. I always look for the good."

                  Asked whether he might be condemned as naïve for believing 
Hamas, Abrahams said: "People might say that I'm naïve, so let them. But I'm 
prepared to give them (Hamas) a chance because I've got faith and confidence in 
Dwaik and Haniyeh. We can't allow 1.5 million (people) to be festering in the 
Gaza Strip while the majority of them are good and well-educated."

                  Abrahams said that his decision to engage with Hamas was 
aimed at "preventing bloodshed on both sides."
                 
           
     


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