Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad submitted his resignation on Saturday in a move that could help usher in a power-sharing deal between Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his rivals in the militant group Hamas.
Abbas, the Fatah leader who appointed Fayyad after Hamas took over the Gaza Strip in 2007, triggering a schism amongst the Palestinians, said he had asked the prime minister to stay on until results emerged from the Egyptian-sponsored reconciliation talks.
“Brother Salam Fayyad has submitted his resignation to us in order to support and strengthen the Palestinian dialogue on forming a government,” Abbas told reporters.
Islamist Hamas has long criticized Fayyad, accusing him of doing the bidding of the US and other Western powers which finance his government in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The executive committee of the umbrella Palestine Liberation Organization, run by Abbas, said in a statement that Fayyad’s resignation would “pave the way to forming a new Palestinian government emanating from national dialogue.”
“This move is meant to encourage the dialogue,” an aide to Abbas said. “If we do not reach an agreement, the president can ask Fayyad to continue as prime minister.”
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said he believed Fayyad’s move was motivated by “internal and personal differences” with Abbas and not part of an effort to promote unity.
In Washington a White House spokesman said it expected to see continued progress in Arab-Israeli peace despite Fayyad’s resignation.
“This government made great strides in providing the transparency, accountability and security that will be essential to achieving a two-state solution,” said White House National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer.
“We expect any future Palestinian government to continue this progress, in line with the Quartet principles and consistent with President Abbas’ vision,” Hammer said, referring to the quartet of Middle East mediators: the US, Russia, the UN and the EU.
After Hamas beat the long-dominant Fatah in a 2006 parliamentary election, the factions formed a government alliance vexed by disagreement over how, or whether, to pursue peace talks with Israel.
Hamas refuses to recognize the Jewish state and was shunned by Western powers that continued to court Abbas.
The president dissolved the government after Hamas drove his forces out of Gaza. Fayyad was appointed to replace Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, who still heads the administration in Gaza. Abbas’ authority has been effectively limited to the West Bank.
Palestinian officials and Western diplomats said it was unclear whether the two factions would be able to form a coalition acceptable to Western powers in Cairo talks, which entered a first round last week and will resume tomorrow.
Abbas wants the factions to form a unity government of non-partisan technocrats to spearhead reconstruction of Gaza after Israel’s 22-day offensive and prepare the way for new Palestinian elections.
A senior Western diplomat said Fayyad had said privately in recent weeks he wanted to leave his post “because he doesn’t see any hope” of healing factional rifts or making progress in peace talks with Israel.
Israeli prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu has been cool to US-backed peace talks and has ruled out ceding parts of Jerusalem to the Palestinians and freezing Jewish settlement growth in the West Bank, key Abbas demands.
The US and the EU have strongly backed Fayyad, and they have privately urged him to stay on, possibly to head a unity administration, diplomats said.
The brief statement announcing Fayyad’s resignation offered few details.
“Prime Minister Salam Fayyad announced tendering the resignation of his cabinet to President Mahmoud Abbas, effective once a government of national reconciliation is formed, but no later than the end of March,” it said.
A source in Fayyad’s office said the prime minister’s resignation would take effect by the end of month, regardless of the outcome of talks. But Abbas could then ask Fayyad to remain in the prime ministerial post or form another government.
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