Egypt postpones Palestinian talks over Hamas boycott

The boycott stems from a failure to reach an agreement with Fatah over jailed supporters. The Hamas-Fatah summit was meant to resurrect the unity government that collapsed in 2007.

Reporting from Jerusalem — The Egyptian government indefinitely postponed reconciliation talks between Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas, setting up a possible new leadership battle between the two sides.

The factional summit, originally scheduled to start Monday, was meant to resurrect the short-lived national unity government that collapsed in June 2007, leaving the militant group Hamas controlling the Gaza Strip and Fatah ruling the West Bank.

Hamas officials told Egyptian negotiators that they would boycott the talks after failing to come to agreement with Fatah over the fate of several hundred Hamas supporters and politicians jailed in the West Bank.

Hamas official Ahmed Youssef confirmed that the two sides had reached a stalemate over the prisoner release.

"There is still time to find a way to handle this," said Youssef, a senior advisor to former Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, the top Hamas leader in Gaza.

A statement published by Egypt's MENA news agency said the talks would be postponed "until the necessary and proper conditions are achieved to secure [their] success."

The setback increases the likelihood of a showdown early next year over Fatah chief Mahmoud Abbas' legitimacy as Palestinian Authority president. Abbas' term expires in January, but he is widely expected to unilaterally extend his presidency.

Hamas says it will oppose any extension and challenge Abbas' authority.

The militant group, which won parliamentary elections in January 2006, has threatened to declare Aziz Dweik, the head of the Palestinian parliament, to be the legitimate president of the Palestinian Authority. Dweik is among the jailed politicians whose release Hamas is demanding; he was arrested after the capture of an Israeli soldier in June 2006.

With Dweik in jail, Hamas could declare his deputy, Ahmad Bahar, as the true Palestinian Authority president. Bahar is in Gaza.

The Cairo summit was meant to head off that confrontation by securing Hamas' approval for an extension of Abbas' term in exchange for a new power-sharing agreement between the two sides.

A complete collapse of the Cairo talks would set Fatah and Hamas on a collision course in January.

Youssef, the Hamas official, said there was still hope of an agreement -- provided that Abbas agrees to release Dweik and hundreds of other Hamas prisoners in the West Bank.


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