Future of Palestinian Authority in doubt: Haniyeh

10 Aug, 2006

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas questioned on Wednesday whether the Palestinian Authority can continue to function with key lawmakers and ministers in Israeli jails.
He raised the possibility of dissolving the Palestinian Authority, which was created under peace deals with Israel in 1994, for the first time since taking office.
Hamas, whose charter calls for Israel's destruction, trounced Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction in a January parliamentary election and took control of the Palestinian Authority in March. "All political elites, the presidency, the factions and the government are invited to discuss the future of the Palestinian Authority following this (Israeli) attack," Haniyeh said, referring to Israel's arrest of parliament speaker Aziz Dweik of Hamas last week.
"Can the Palestinian Authority function under the occupation, kidnappings and assassination?" Haniyeh asked lawmakers in the West Bank via a video link from the Gaza Strip.
Asked later if he believed the Palestinian Authority should be dissolved, Haniyeh told reporters in Gaza that Israel's goal was to make the Palestinian Authority "weak, ineffective". "They have raised the necessity to discuss the future of the authority," he said.

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