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Yassin: Yes to Document, No to Stopping Resistance

“Resistance has been the sole effective weapon in the face of the mounting Israeli aggression, and it shall remain our sole means to regain our rights”: Sheikh Yassin

By Mohammed Yassin, IOL Palestine Correspondent

GAZA, August 19 (IsalmOnline) - Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the spiritual leader of the Islamic resistance group Hamas, said the Palestinian United Leadership document could not be issued unless it guaranteed the Palestinian right to self defense, and added that Hamas will not accept it if it asks the Palestinian people to stop their resistance and recognize Israel as a state.

In an interview with IslamOnline Sunday, August 18, Sheikh Yassin said Hamas has reservations about a number of points in the document, which accepts the establishing a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip alone.

“We will never give up the Palestinian lands occupied in 1948,” Sheikh Yassin said.

Another reservation about the document stems from Hamas’s desire to have a provisional Palestinian leadership until the time of the elections, said Sheikh Yassin, pointing out that the present leadership has no right to change the strategies of the Palestinian national forces or take critical decisions such as stopping resistance and martyr operations.

The Palestinian Authority should give resistance ten more years and see whether the results are more favorable than the results if the Oslo agreements, he added.

“Ten years of negotiations have brought nothing for the Palestinian people,” he said. “Resistance has been the sole effective weapon in the face of the mounting Israeli aggression, and it shall remain our sole means to regain our rights.”

The Hamas spiritual leader said the movement does not aim at hindering the document of the united national and Islamic forces, but that it only has reservations about it.

“We seek nothing but a political and practical program that brings together various resistance movements and unites them for the benefit of the Palestinian people,” Sheikh Yassin told IslamOnline.

He pointed out that Hamas has never backed off from attending meetings of the Palestinian resistance movements, adding that a Hamas deputy has taken part in the formation of the document. This participation, however, does not necessarily mean that Hamas accepts the document.

Meanwhile, Mohammad al-Hindi, a senior Islamic Jihad official said that the main Palestinian movements will resume discussions on a common strategy for the pursuit of the 22-month-old Intifada on Thursday, August 22.

"The high committee of the National and Islamic Forces will meet Thursday in Gaza City to discuss Islamic Jihad and Hamas's comments" on a document for a united leadership, Al-Hindi said Saturday, August 17.

The 13 major Palestinian groups spent most of last week discussing a united leadership document calling for the creation of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders, and an end to attacks inside Israel.

Talks stalled Thursday night, reportedly over Islamic groups' insistence on a Palestinian state on the whole of the area between the Mediterranean and the Jordan river, including on the land which has made up the state of Israel since 1948.

Jihad and Hamas leaders have also refused to limit their retaliatory attacks to the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Hamas blasted early Monday, August 19, Israel's intention to begin implementing the "Gaza First" security plan as a cynical plot to "destroy the resistance", a Hamas spokesman told Agence France-Press (AFP).

"Hamas and the Palestinian people reject any agreement which aims at destroying our resistance and ending the Intifada [Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation], which is what this agreement is aimed at," Gaza-based Hamas official Ismail Haniya told AFP.

The Hamas leader was speaking after Israel announced late Sunday, August 18 it would start its "Gaza First" security plan Monday with withdrawals from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Bethlehem. In return, Palestinian security forces are expected to police resistance groups.

"This will only give security and quiet to the Zionists and the occupation, not to our people," Haniya said.

Haniya vowed Hamas would keep fighting as long as Israel continued its occupation of Palestinian territory.

"We are not able to accept partial quiet in Gaza when all the cities, towns and refugee camps in the West Bank are under Israeli aggression and siege," Haniya added.

Hania also slammed the agreement as a cynical "first step" to secure some kind of calm before an expected U.S. attack on Iraq.

"I am sure that the Israeli Zionists will not respect any agreement, but this agreement is the first step before a strike on Iraq," he said.

 

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