GAZA
CITY, October 9 (IslamOnline.net) - In what seems to be a last-minute
difference with Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, Premier-designate
Ahmed Qorei tendered his resignation to the Palestinian leader Thursday,
October 9, just two days after being sworn in, well-informed Palestinian
sources told IslamOnline.net.
This
came after a stormy meeting of the Fatah Central Committee, chaired by
Arafat, ended up acrimoniously with Qorei walking out, according to
press reports.
Arafat
contested the appointment of Nasser yussuf, who did not turn up on
Tuesday to take the oath before the Palestinian leader with other
ministers, as the new interior minister, said the sources.
President
Arafat and Qorei were also at loggerheads as to the naming of the new
government, said Abdel-Rahman Hamad, a member of the new government and
also a lawmaker.
"It
seems there was a difference on naming the cabinet emergency or ordinary
one as an emergency government would not need a confidence vote,"
he said.
Hamad
underlined, however, that the new ministers refused to operate until
after securing the confidence of the Legislative Council.
Officially
naming the eight-member cabinet Sunday, October 6, Arafat issued a
decree declaring a state of emergency and naming Qorei as head of an
emergency cabinet.
Some
MPs had argued that while Arafat had the right to declare a state of
emergency, there was no prevision in the Palestinian constitution for an
emergency cabinet and that Qorei's team would require parliamentary
approval.
Downplaying
the disagreement as "not substantial", Hamad said the fragile
situation in Palestinian territories could not bear "a
constitutional conflict".
The
PLC session, due Thursday for a confidence vote on Qorei’s government,
was postponed indefinitely.
It
was not immediately clear whether Arafat accepted Qorei’s resignation.
But
leading Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said the disagreement could
be resolved by Saturday.
He
admitted, at the same time, serious differences between President Arafat
and Qorei.
Abdel-Sattar
Qassem, a political analyst, argued Arafat wants to maintain his grip on
the new government by installing three aides to the interior minister.
He
attributes the step to Arafat’s "maneuverability", adding
the Palestinian leader wants to keep all strings in his hand as long as
he lived.
On
the future of Palestinian premiership, the expert admitted the post had
been created under "pressures from the U.S. and not out of a
popular desire".