Middle East: Rival Palestinian factions agreed yesterday to form a power-sharing government in the hope of ending a crippling international economic blockade.
Ismail Haniyeh, a Hamas leader who heads the current government, will remain prime minister in the new cabinet, according to officials.
Although Hamas still refuses to recognise Israel, a senior aide said the group has agreed to delegate negotiating power to Mahmoud Abbas, the more moderate president and head of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, which does recognise the Jewish state. Palestinian officials believe this formula will be enough to satisfy Israel and the international community.
Mr Abbas, who is also head of the Fatah party, emerged from hours of talks in Gaza with Mr Haniyeh to announce the deal.
"The continuous efforts to form a national unity government have ended successfully with the announcement of a political programme for this government," he said. "Efforts in the next few days will continue to complete the formation of the national unity government."
An aide to Mr Abbas said the president would dissolve the current Hamas-dominated government within 48 hours ahead of a new national unity cabinet.
But senior Hamas figures suggested it might take several more days.
After Hamas won the Palestinian elections in January, Israel and the international community halted hundreds of millions of dollars in funding, demanding that the new government recognise Israel and stop violence. That triggered an economic crisis, with 160,000 civil servants, including doctors, teachers and the security forces, unpaid for seven months.
Israel and western leaders have said they would talk to a new coalition government so long as it meets three conditions: recognising Israel, renouncing violence and accepting past peace agreements.
Hamas insists it will not change its charter, which calls for Israel to be replaced by an Islamic state.
But Ahmed Yusuf, a senior Hamas adviser, said that negotiating power would be handed to Mr Abbas as head of the PLO, an umbrella group that includes nearly all Palestinian factions except radicals such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Mr Yusuf said: "It will be President Abbas who will go and negotiate with the world community and the Israelis . . . whenever he has an agreement with either the Israelis or the world community he will come back and address it to the government and the parliament."
There would be about 24 seats in the new cabinet, of which eight might go to Hamas, four to Fatah and the remainder to independents, and other political factions.
In another concession, Hamas accepted the new government would abide by previous peace agreements.
- (Guardian service)