UPDATED ON:
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2007
12:33 MECCA TIME, 9:33 GMT
 
NEWS MIDDLE EAST
Hamas against foreign troops
Abbas said on Friday that the deployment of foreign troops was necessary for early elections [AFP]

The armed wing of Hamas has rejected calls by Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, for the deployment of international troops in the Gaza Strip, vowing to attack them like other "occupation forces".

The Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades said in a statement on Saturday: "We will only receive these forces with shells and rockets."

In talks on Friday with Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, Abbas had called for deployment of international forces into Gaza where Hamas routed his forces on June 15.

Early elections

Abbas had said that the deployment of foreign troops was necessary to provide security for early parliamentary and presidential elections that he plans to organise in the coming months.

Ghazi Hamad, a Hamas spokesman, said talks about elections at the present time will not solve the crisis facing Palestinians.       

Hamad did however say that Hamas has no issues with holding elections if all Palestinian factions agree to it.

 

France backs Abbas

 

Meanwhile, France threw its unconditional support behind Abbas and said it hoped the crisis in Gaza would help reignite the stalled peace process.   

 

Your Views

"The refusal by the US, EU et al to deal with Hamas reflects their disrespect for the wishes of the Palestinian people"

Elise, Bemidji, US

Send us your views

"At this time we are standing alongside the Palestinian Authority, the only representative of the Palestinian people," Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister, said after talks with the visiting Abbas.


Kouchner did not say what role Hamas might play in any peace steps but Abbas appeared in no mood to talk to the Islamic movement.
   

"What happened in Gaza is a bloody and ferocious coup d'etat against Palestinian legitimacy," Abbas told reporters following an earlier meeting on Friday with Sarkozy.
   

"What I heard from president Sarkozy is support for a political solution on the basis of international legitimacy, the Arab initiative, and [US] President [George] Bush's vision," he said.
   

France announced this week it was releasing $15 million in funds for the Palestinian Authority and Kouchner said he believed the Israelis were shortly set to transfer "at least" $300 million to Abbas's new government.
   

Israel agreed last Sunday to hand over some of the Palestinian tax revenues it had collected but then withheld after Hamas won elections in 2006. However, details of the transfer have yet to be fully worked out.

Source: Al Jazeera and Agencies
Related:
Abbas orders fighters to disarm  
(27 Jun 2007)
Abbas in bid to deploy Fatah force  
(26 Jun 2007)
Abbas: Time for 'serious talks'  
(25 Jun 2007)
Summit in show of support for Abbas  
(25 Jun 2007)
Olmert and Bush back Abbas  
(19 Jun 2007)
Abbas swears in emergency cabinet  
(17 Jun 2007)
Abbas wins Arab states' backing  
(16 Jun 2007)
Mubarak: Gaza takeover a coup  
(23 Jun 2007)
Hamas tightens grip on Gaza  
(14 Jun 2007)
Hamas issues Gaza arms ultimatum  
(13 Jun 2007)
Tools:
Send  Email article
Print  Print article
 Send your feedback
Top news
Myanmar cyclone toll tops 77,000
Lebanon talks open in Doha
Mass burials for China victims
Deadly blast hits Sri Lanka capital
Saudi Arabia raises oil output
MIDDLE EAST news
Lebanon talks open in Doha
New Bin Laden tape warns Israel
Saudi Arabia raises oil output
Iranian diplomats wounded in Iraq
Palestinians mark the 'Nakba'