http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1055144.html

            Last update - 20:01 13/01/2009     
     
     
      Hamas: Egypt offer for Gaza truce doesn't meet our demands  
     
      By Avi Issacharoff and Yoav Stern, Haaretz Correspondents, and The 
Associated Press  
     
      Tags: Hamas, Gaza, Israel, Egypt  
     

      A senior Hamas official said Tuesday that an Egyptian proposal for a 
cease-fire between Israel and the Gaza Strip was unacceptable in its current 
form, as it still does not meet the group's demands. 

      The Egyptian initiative calls for a temporary truce, followed by a long 
ceasefire and the opening of border crossings with the presence of the 
Palestinian Authority of President Mahmoud Abbas, whose forces Hamas drove out 
of Gaza in 2007. The third phase of the initiative deals with efforts to 
reconcile Hamas and Abbas's Fatah group. 
            
           
      Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouq told Al-Jazeera television on Tuesday 
any cease-fire proposal must address the group's demands for an Israeli 
withdrawal of its forces from the Gaza Strip and a complete opening of border 
crossings. 

      "This initiative, if it is to be accepted, will be on the basis set by 
the movement from the beginning," he said. 

      "I believe this track will be the launch point for the acceptance of any 
initiative, Egyptian or otherwise," by Hamas, Abu Marzouq added. 

      A Hamas delegation is in Cairo to relay the group's position to Egyptian 
intelligence officials. 

      Hamas envoys resumed talks in Cairo with Egyptian intelligence officials 
on an Egyptian truce proposal for the embattled Gaza Strip, according to 
officials in Cairo. The talks follow diplomatic efforts that have made little 
concrete progress in reconciling key differences between Israel and Hamas. 

      Al-Arabia television reported that Hamas has asked for the exact dates of 
the proposed Israel Defense Forces withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and the 
reopening of the border crossings. 

      Earlier Tuesday, the London-based Arabic daily Al-HayatHamas sources have 
said that the Palestinian militant organization would agree to the deployment 
of Turkish troops along Gaza's border with Egypt. 

      "We trust Turkey and its role as an Islamic country," the Hamas officials 
said. They were referring to a proposal recently submitted to Hamas' 
Damascus-based political chief Khaled Meshal by Turkish officials. 

      Egypt: Hamas using Gaza war for political gain 

      Egyptian officials said Tuesday they agree with Israeli estimates that 
there is a rift growing between Hamas' Gaza leadership and its leadership 
abroad. 

      Egyptian weekly Al-Ahram on Tuesday reported that while Hamas' leadership 
in Gaza supports the Egyptian cease-fire proposal, Hamas' leadership in Syria 
is being pressured by Syria and Iran to reject or sabotage the Egyptian 
proposal. 

      Egyptian officials also told Al-Ahram that Hamas is trying to use the war 
in Gaza for political gain. 

      Al-Ahram reported that Israel has officially apologized to Egypt for the 
four Egyptian citizens who were wounded by shrapnel during an Israeli air 
strike on Gaza targets near the border with Egypt. 

      Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak, meanwhile, left for Riyadh, Saudi 
Arabia, on Tuesday for talks with his ally, King Abdullah on the conflict which 
has pitched Arabs in a new controversy. 

      Egyptian officials said Mubarak will brief Abdullah on the Egyptian 
efforts to convince Hamas to accept an immediate cease-fire with Israel. 

      Mubarak's previously unannounced departure followed reports in Egyptian 
      state-owned papers about difficulties in the ongoing talks with Hamas. 

      The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the 
sensitivity of the talks, said Egypt intelligence chief Omar Suleiman was 
accompanying Mubarak on his Saudi trip. They said Suleiman left the talks with 
Hamas officials to be handled by his aides. 

      There is no indication what transpired in the negotiations prior to 
Suleiman's departure. A three-member Hamas delegation from the group's exiled 
leadership in Syria had returned to Cairo from Damascus late Monday to resume 
the talks and several Hamas members from Gaza were already in the Egyptian 
capital. 

      The group has said it is sticking to its demands for an immediate 
withdrawal of Israeli forces and said it will only observe a cease-fire 
afterward. 

      The talks come as Israeli ground troops pushed deeper into Gaza, battling 
Palestinian militants in the streets of a densely populated Gaza City 
neighborhood early Tuesday. 

      Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would end the military operations 
only when Hamas stops rocketing Israel and halts weapons smuggling across the 
porous border. 

      Hamas downplays rift between group leaders in Syria and Gaza 

      Meanwhile, a Hamas official in Syria downplayed rumors of a rift between 
      members in Gaza and the exiled leadership in Damascus. 

      Mohammad Nazal of the Hamas political bureau, told The Associated Press 
that such reports were meant to cause confusion over where Hamas stands and 
were part of psychological warfare by Israel. 

      Representing Hamas in talks in Egypt were Salah Bardaweel and Jamal Abu 
Hashem from Gaza, and Mohammed Nasr from the Damascus-based Political Bureau of 
the group, Nazal said. 
     


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke