Published date: 28 January 2020 17:10 UTC | Last update: 23 hours 41 min ago
Holding anti-Trump placards, members of Fatah, Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine marched together through Gaza, hours before Trump, alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, reveals his plan to address the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Meanwhile, Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh called Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to express his support for the position taken by the Palestinian Authority. He also called on parties to put their differences aside and form a unified front.
Ismail Radwan, a member of Hamas’s political bureau in Gaza, said the show of unity between the different Palestinian parties was a sign to show that Palestinians from across the political spectrum refused Tuesday’s deal.
He said he fears that the deal will hand over all Palestinian land to the Israelis and that Palestinians will not allow it to pass and come into action.
“The security coordination with the Israeli occupation must be stopped,” Radwan told Middle East Eye.
“We are running out of choices and all options on how to respond to this deal are now on the table. Palestinians have been deprived of their rights for decades and they will not let this [deal] pass without a fight.”
Munther al-Hayek, commissioner of the Fatah movement in Gaza, was one of the participants in Tuesday’s demonstrations.
He outlined how Fatah in Gaza supported calls by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to block Trump’s deal and renewed demands for the creation of a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders.
“The question of the city of Jerusalem is ideological, not political, like Mecca for all Muslims,” Hayek said.
Hayek noted that last year, Fatah boycotted a summit in Bahrain where Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner was to reveal the economic aspect of the proposed deal.
He said the Palestinian leadership had no choice but to reject negotiations since entering them put them in a “position of weakness.”
The Manama meeting included dignitaries from several Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Abbas refused to attend the meeting and urged other Arab states to boycott the summit.
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