Palestinian unity government holds first Gaza meeting

10 Oct, 2014

The Palestinian unity government held its first ever meeting in the war-ravaged Gaza Strip on Thursday as its rival factions presented a common front ahead of a major donors' conference. The gathering came more than four months after the government was sworn in following a landmark reconciliation deal between Fatah and Hamas.
Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah crossed into Gaza on Thursday where he visited some of the areas of the Strip worst-hit by a 50-day Israeli military operation against Palestinian militants. He later met with his ministers at the Gaza property of president Mahmud Abbas, an AFP correspondent said. "What we have seen today is dreadful and painful, and it has become clear to us that the rebuilding (of Gaza) is at the top of our list of priorities," Hamdallah said.
The conflict, which ended on August 26, killed nearly 2,200 Palestinians, most of them civilians, and 73 on the Israeli side, mostly soldiers and also left 100,000 Gazans homeless. Earlier Hamdallah told reporters that rebuilding Gaza required a functioning unity government. "We are facing a humanitarian and moral duty to our people in Gaza," he said after entering Gaza via the Israeli-controlled Erez crossing.
"We have put the years of division behind us, and the most important priority of the government is to guarantee a return to normal life for Gazans and unity with the West Bank." At a press conference after the cabinet meeting, Gaza's former prime minister Ismail Haniya, a leader of Hamas, urged Fatah and Hamas to follow through with their reconciliation pledges.
"This meeting strengthens Palestinian unity and the end of a division we have lived for years and which has harmed the nation and (our) politics," Haniya said. "We emphasise the need for the success of reconciliation, in all its forms, and the need to work together for this government to succeed in its mission." The cabinet's composition was agreed in June between bitter rivals Fatah, which dominates the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority (PA), and Hamas, which remains in de facto control of Gaza.

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