Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Quartet links rebuilding Gaza with ceding Palestinian rights

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Senior member of Hamas' political bureau Mousa Abu-Marzkuq yesterday revealed that Quartet peace envoy Tony Blair is trying to blackmail Hamas in return for reconstructing the Gaza Strip.
On his Facebook page, Abu-Marzouk revealed five conditions put by the Quartet that Hamas has to meet in order to make room for the reconstruction of what the Israeli occupation destroyed during last summer's 51-day war in Gaza.
Abu-Marzouk said: "Once again, and in the name of the international community, Tony Blair is exploiting the tragedy made by the Israeli occupation that includes the destruction of homes and making people homeless."
Expressing deep concern about the devastated people in Gaza, Abu-Marzouk said: "Destroyed homes of Palestinians in Gaza became shrines to Blair and his likes. Blair says that there is no reconstruction unless these five conditions are fulfilled, and Hamas has to agree to:
Accept the Palestinian reconciliation.
Accept the political programme based on a Palestinian state on 1967 borders.
Reiterate that Hamas is a Palestinian faction with only Palestinian goals and it is not part of any Islamist movement with regional goals.
Adopt the two-state solution as a final, not temporary, solution for the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Send an assurance message to Egypt that Gaza is not a terror base for Sinai terrorists and hold talks with the Egyptian government to stop terrorism in Sinai."
"These are the conditions for Hamas to be accepted by the international community as well as the Quartet's conditions for rebuilding Gaza and improving living standards," Abu-Marzouk said.
He added: "These conditions do not mean that Hamas will deal with the Zionist enemy; not even one condition was put on Israel."
Abu-Marzouk refuted the conditions one by one. Regarding the reconciliation, he said: "It was achieved. I do not know what is needed more from Hamas, which conceded everything for a technocrat government."
About the state on the 1967 borders, he said: "The problem is not with the Palestinian side, but with the other side. Blair should have spoken about it with Israel. He should have asked it whether it accepts a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders with Jerusalem as its capital and whether it accepts to dismantle settlements."
Regarding Hamas's goals, he stressed that Hamas is a Palestinian faction with Palestinian goals and it is not part of a regional Islamist movement. "We know that he means the Muslim Brotherhood," he said.
"This is used by all as a pretext," he stressed. "Hamas is a Palestinian movement and its history proves that as it has not carried out any of its operations outside the Palestinian lands. Even when its leaders were targeted outside Palestine, it did not respond in the same places."
Meanwhile, he reiterated the importance of Hamas having links with any side offering help for it. "We have no interest to have hostility with any party wherever it is and whatever the ideological differences with it are," he said.
About the two-state solution, Abu-Marzouk said: "Blair knows that any oppressive agreement cannot remain alive for too long. Any agreement imposed by the current powers cannot remain the same when these powers change."
Regarding Egypt, he explained: "Egypt is not merely a neighbouring country; its stability and unity are in the Palestinian interest. We deal seriously and responsibly with anyone who harms Egypt. Gaza will absolutely not be a breeding ground for terrorism."
Adding that Hamas's relationship with Egypt is not of Blair's concern.

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