Palestinian unity rally in Gaza ends in violence

By Nidal al-MughrabiPosted 2011/03/15 at 3:23 pm EDT

GAZA, Mar. 15, 2011 (Reuters) — Violence broke out after a rally for 
Palestinian unity in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday when Hamas supporters beat other 
participants with clubs, witnesses said, though the Islamist group denied being 
behind any violence.
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Tens of thousands of Palestinians had answered a rallying call on Facebook to 
demonstrate in Gaza and the West Bank for reconciliation between Hamas 
Islamists and President Mahmoud Abbas's rival Fatah group.

About 2,000 demonstrators remained on the streets of Gaza as the rally wound 
down, defying calls to disperse by Hamas, which controls the territory. Hamas 
supporters then attacked the crowd, injuring at least a dozen people, witnesses 
said.

"They attacked us, 400 to 500 Hamas men in plain clothes. I was beaten with a 
club, many others were beaten," said one activist, giving his first name Ali. 
"They dispersed the crowd."

Hamas denied the accusations, saying on its website that the crowd broke up 
after "clashes between different youth groups."

It was the first time Hamas's authority had been challenged in such a public 
manner since it seized control of Gaza from rivals loyal to the Western-backed 
Abbas in 2007.

Organizers of the rallies said revolts against authoritarian leaders elsewhere 
in the Arab world had inspired them to act.

Before the clashes Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas's leader in Gaza, said in a televised 
speech he respected the will of the people to establish a unified Palestinian 
leadership, and called on Abbas to meet him.

"I invite President Abu Mazen (Abbas) and the Fatah movement to an immediate 
meeting, here in the Gaza Strip or in any other place, to launch a 
comprehensive dialogue," Haniyeh said.

"This could be the doorway to achieving reconciliation."

BIG RALLIES IN GAZA

Rallies drew close to 100,000 protesters from various groups in Hamas-ruled 
Gaza, where unemployment is over 50 percent. "The people want to end the 
division," one crowd chanted.

In the West Bank city of Ramallah, where only 4,000 joined a rally, Abbas 
renewed his call for presidential and parliamentary elections, which Hamas has 
repeatedly rejected.

"Elections are the only way to end this ugly and unacceptable division," he 
told reporters after talks with the visiting president of Cyprus.

Salam Fayyad, Abbas's prime minister, told reporters in the West Bank that 
ending the split was "a national priority." "I hope the call will be heeded ... 
we need to be able to bring this sad chapter to a close."

In Gaza, Hamas officials told other factions the rallies must end at sunset.

Organizers said Hamas security forces blocked all roads leading to the protest 
at sundown before club-wielding men in plain clothes, some riding motorcycles, 
attacked the crowd.

The spokesman of the Hamas-run interior ministry in Gaza, Ehab Al-Ghsain, said 
the report was a fabrication by Fatah officials with the aim of "sabotaging 
internal security."

After its shock defeat of Fatah in the last Palestinian general election in 
2006 and the collapse of a power-sharing bid, Hamas seized the Gaza Strip from 
Fatah in 2007.

Arab efforts to reconcile them made no progress.

Hamas does not support Fatah's policy of seeking peace with Israel to end the 
West Bank occupation and create a Palestinian state there and in Gaza. It 
refuses to renounce violence or to recognize the Jewish state. The West regards 
Hamas as a terrorist organization and refuses to negotiate with it.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta and Mohammed Assadi in Ramallah)

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller and Nidal al-Mughrabi, editing by Tim Pearce)



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