Israel will not hamper Palestinian vote: officials
Posted on: Sunday, 23 October 2005, 19:06 CDT
By Ori Lewis
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel does not plan to hamper upcoming Palestinian parliamentary elections even if Hamas Islamic militants take part, Israeli officials said on Sunday in an apparent shift from earlier threats.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said last month that Israel could hinder voting in the occupied West Bank if the elections were contested by Hamas, which is sworn to destroying Israel and has spearheaded a Palestinian uprising.
"Israel will not help the Palestinians if Hamas takes part, but neither will it hamper the voting in areas where Israel has control," an official in Sharon's office told Reuters.
The apparent change followed a lead set by the United States, Israel's key ally, after a White House meeting last week between President George W. Bush and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who wants to bring Hamas nearer the political mainstream.
An administration official said the United States still saw Hamas as a terrorist group but it was up to the Palestinians to decide who could take part in the election -- the first that Hamas plans to contest. It boycotted the previous vote in 1996.
MOMENTUM
The United States hopes to use the momentum from Israel's withdrawal from the occupied Gaza Strip in September to revive negotiations on a "road map" for Palestinian statehood.
Abbas has shied away from disarming groups such as Hamas, a process that the Palestinians are meant to start under the road map. But he has said that Hamas would no longer need to keep its weapons after elections.
Hamas, following an eight-month-old truce, has rejected any suggestion that it would disarm.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said any change in the Israeli position on the election was "just for public relations." He accused Israel of hampering the ballot already by arresting hundreds of suspected militants, including many Hamas members, in the West Bank.
Polls show Hamas has about 30 percent support amongst Palestinians. Its charity network and perceived lack of corruption, as well as its suicide bombings, have won it support at the expense of the dominant Fatah movement.
Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni called for foreign pressure on Hamas to show that it had changed.
"As far as we are concerned, Hamas must make a decision now -- either to participate in politics or to continue to be a terror organization," Livni told Israel Radio.
"It is very important, in the run-up to the election, for the international community to understand that this position is not pro-Israel or anti-Palestinian," she said. "Whoever wants the peace process to move forward should be making this demand."
Israel has said there will be no talks on Palestinian statehood unless militant groups are disarmed, but it has also not met its own road map commitment to freeze West Bank settlement building.
(Additional reporting by Mohammed Assadi in Ramallah)
Source: REUTERS
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