Rafah crossing to reopen despite Israeli objections
By News Wires the 27/05/2011 - 22:50

Egypt is set to reopen the Rafah border crossing into the Gaza Strip on 
Saturday despite Israeli objections that Hamas militants will funnel weapons 
into Gaza through the crossing, which has been closed since 2007.

AFP - Egypt's decision to permanently open its border crossing with Hamas-ruled 
Gaza starting on Saturday signals an adjustment in its foreign policy that will 
boost the Islamists despite Israeli objections.

The decision was first announced in April after Hamas signed a deal with its 
rival Fatah led by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank, ending 
a four-year rift that led to Egypt's closure of the Rafah crossing in 2007.

The crossing, where the Egyptians have eased passage since a deadly Israeli 
raid on a ship carrying aid to Gaza last May, will as of Saturday allow passage 
both ways between 0700 GMT and 1500 GMT every day expect Fridays.

People under 18 or older than 40 will require only a visa to pass, but those 
between 18 and 40 will still need security clearance, crossing officials say.

Commercial traffic will continue to have to pass through border points with 
Israel.

A Hamas official on a visit to Egypt referred to outstanding issues, such as 
the passage of people placed on a blacklist by a Palestinian Authority security 
apparatus loyal to Abbas.

Egypt's decision to keep the border closed after Hamas ousted Fatah in 2007 
following a week of deadly violence had been controversial in the most 
populated Arab nation.

Cairo's success in helping reconcile Fatah and Hamas after the February ouster 
of president Hosni Mubarak and its subsequent decision to reopen the Rafah 
crossing signal a different approach to Egypt's neighbours.

Mubarak and his foreign minister insisted they were obliged to keep Rafah 
closed to passage because of a 2005 deal that regulated the crossing, although 
Egypt was not a party to the US-brokered agreement.

The decision to keep it closed during the December 2008-January 2009 war as 
Israel blitzed and then invaded Gaza invited acerbic criticism of Mubarak, 
whose antipathy towards Hamas he scarcely concealed.

The border crossing had been regulated according to a US and EU-brokered treaty 
that required the presence of members of Abbas's presidential guard at the 
crossing along with EU monitors.

Mubarak's government at the time accused Hamas of seeking to use the war, which 
killed 1,400 Palestinians, as leverage to reopen the crossing to add to its 
legitimacy as Gaza's rightful rulers.

It was not immediately clear if and when members of Fatah's Force 17, the 
presidential guard, would return to the border, but the EU welcomed the 
decision and said there were consultations on the return of its monitors.

Israel says it is "worried" by the decision to reopen the crossing, which it 
says will facilitate arms smuggling to Hamas, although the militants acquire 
their arms by sea or through a network of tunnels with Egypt.

It has also rejected the unity deal and says there could be no negotiations 
with Hamas as long as it refuses to recognise the Jewish state and uses 
violence.

Israel, which eased the blockade after the aid ship incident, is likely to keep 
the siege in place as long as Hamas continues to hold an Israeli soldier 
abducted in 2006.

Gilad Shalit's capture in a cross-border raid from Gaza instigated Israel's 
blockade on the densely populated coastal enclave, which is home to about 1.5 
million Palestinians.
 

 
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110527-egypt-reopen-rafah-border-crossing-gaza-permanently-hamas-israel-palestinian-territory




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