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U.N. makes $613-million appeal for Gaza

United Nations and Palestinian officials also urge Israel and Egypt to lift their blockade of Gaza to allow through materials needed for reconstruction after the Israeli assault.

January 30, 2009|Richard Boudreaux

Ahmed Yousef, a senior political advisor to the Hamas government, said in an interview that Hamas had no objection to allowing Abbas' forces and the Europeans to return to the border posts in Gaza. But he said the agreement must be revised to make Hamas a partner.

Yousef said Hamas favored joint control of the border as part of a wider reconciliation between the bitterly divided Palestinian factions. He said he thought such a reconciliation was possible.


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In an interview with Al Jazeera television Thursday, Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said reconciliation was now the group's "main aim." He also said he hoped that ties between the United States and the Muslim world would rebound after suffering during the Bush administration.

"I think it is not in America's interest to stay in conflict with the Arab and Muslim worlds, considering its interests in the region," he said. "We hope that the new American president revises all the policies of his predecessor."

It was not clear where Haniyeh gave the interview. He has been in hiding since before Israel began its attack on Gaza last month.

The United States, along with Israel, many Western countries and some Arab states, has been working to isolate Hamas. They have insisted that Abbas' Palestinian Authority and international aid groups control any funds for Gaza, to prevent Hamas from getting credit for rebuilding.

Haniyeh addressed that issue in a conciliatory statement this week, saying the Hamas government would not insist on monopolizing reconstruction funds. Yousef said Thursday that Hamas favored an Arab League proposal to set up an independent body to audit reconstruction funds.

But major rebuilding will be impossible, officials in Gaza say, until Israel and Egypt fully open their borders. Israel, which says it is worried about the possible military use of some building materials, allows only limited shipments of humanitarian aid, fuel and consumer goods into Gaza.

Hamas advisor Yousef said that Egypt was reluctant to relax its border controls until Hamas and its Palestinian rivals agree on a power-sharing arrangement. And Israel is insisting on the release of an Israeli soldier Hamas has held for 2 1/2 years.

Israel's infrastructure minister, Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, said Hamas must decide whether to meet Israel's conditions or risk being blamed for keeping much of Gaza in ruins.

"To start construction works, you need cement, pipes, all sorts of construction materials," he told Israel Radio. "If Hamas leaders want to leave this area in the state that it's in right now, they will have to answer to the residents."

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boudreaux@latimes.com

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