Hamas and Fatah hold reconciliation talks in Cairo

Egyptian-brokered summit comes ahead of May and July elections, which many Palestinians believe is Abbas attempt to show off democratic credentials to Biden, with whom he wants to reset relations after tense period under Trump
Reuters|
Leaders of rival Palestinian factions began Egyptian-brokered reconciliation talks in Cairo on Monday to try to heal long-standing internal divisions, ahead of planned Palestinian elections later this year.
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  • Egypt has tried in vain for 14 years to reconcile Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's nationalist Fatah faction and its bitter rival Hamas, the armed Islamist movement that opposes any negotiations with Israel.
    3 View gallery
    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas hands the election decree to Chairman of the Palestinian Central Election Committee Hana Naser in Ramallah
    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas hands the election decree to Chairman of the Palestinian Central Election Committee Hana Naser in Ramallah
    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas hands the election decree to the head of the Palestinian Central Election Committee Hana Naser in Ramallah
    (Photo: Reuters)
    No Palestinian elections have been held in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem for 15 years.
    As well as Hamas and Fatah there are thought to be around a dozen other factions represented in the Cairo talks. Among those invited was Islamic Jihad, an Iran-backed terror group that boycotted the 1996 and 2006 elections and which Palestinian sources say is now mulling whether to take part this year.
    But such is the mistrust between the rivals that issues on the agenda include electoral basics such as how ballot stations will be guarded and how courts will adjudicate election disputes.
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    ארכיון 2010 ג'ו ביידן אז סגן נשיא ארה"ב עם אבו מאזן ב רמאללה
    ארכיון 2010 ג'ו ביידן אז סגן נשיא ארה"ב עם אבו מאזן ב רמאללה
    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas meeting with then-U.S. vice president Joe Biden in Ramallah in 2016
    (Photo: AP)
    There is widespread skepticism that the elections will even happen.
    Many Palestinians believe they are primarily an attempt by Abbas to show his democratic credentials to the new administration of President Joe Biden, with whom Abbas wants to reset relations after they reached a new low under President Donald Trump.
    "There are equal chances for success and failure," said Hani Al-Masri, a political analyst in the West Bank, who is taking part in the talks as an independent.
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    Gaza's Hamas Chief Yehya Al-Sinwar talks to media, in Gaza City
    Gaza's Hamas Chief Yehya Al-Sinwar talks to media, in Gaza City
    Hamas leader in Gaza Yahya Sinwar talks to media from Gaza City
    (Photo: Reuters)
    Abbas's western-backed Palestinian Authority, which has limited self-rule in the West Bank, plans to hold parliamentary elections on May 22 and a presidential vote on July 31.
    There are 2.8 million eligible voters in Gaza and the West Bank, and more than 80 percent of them have so far been registered with the Central Election Commission. Palestinian voting age is 18 years old.
    The last ballot in 2006 ended in a surprise win by Hamas in its first parliamentary elections. That set up a power struggle between Hamas, with its power base in Gaza, and Abbas' Fatah in the West Bank.
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