- News>
- World
Hamas rejects Arafat appeal to renew peace
Gaza City, Aug 28: The Islamic radical group Hamas rejected today an appeal by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat to renew a truce which was called off after the killing of one of its co-founders last week.
Gaza City, Aug 28: The Islamic radical group Hamas rejected today an appeal by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat to renew a truce which was called off after the killing
of one of its co-founders last week.
"Hamas rejects the appeal (by Arafat) to resume the
truce as the Zionist occupation has torpedoed the truce with
their assassinations of women, children and Palestinian
political leaders," Hamas political leader Abdelaziz Rantissi
told.
"We cannot speak about a truce while aggression against the Palestinian people continues."
Arafat said in a statement yesterday that a renewal of the truce would "give a chance to all peaceful international efforts for the implementation of the roadmap", in reference to a US-backed peace plan.
Hamas and the smaller Islamic Jihad both called off a seven-week-old truce last week in the aftermath of the killing of senior Hamas figure Ismail Abu Shanab in an Israeli air strike in Gaza.
The truce had already been effectively wrecked by a Hamas suicide bus bombing in Jerusalem last week which left 21 people dead.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas broke off all contact with the hardline groups in the wake of the Jerusalem bombing.
Rantissi said that Hamas was "ready to talk" with Abbas.
"We are in favour of dialogue but it is impossible to make progress in a situation which is extremely dangerous," he added.
Bureau Report
"We cannot speak about a truce while aggression against the Palestinian people continues."
Arafat said in a statement yesterday that a renewal of the truce would "give a chance to all peaceful international efforts for the implementation of the roadmap", in reference to a US-backed peace plan.
Hamas and the smaller Islamic Jihad both called off a seven-week-old truce last week in the aftermath of the killing of senior Hamas figure Ismail Abu Shanab in an Israeli air strike in Gaza.
The truce had already been effectively wrecked by a Hamas suicide bus bombing in Jerusalem last week which left 21 people dead.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas broke off all contact with the hardline groups in the wake of the Jerusalem bombing.
Rantissi said that Hamas was "ready to talk" with Abbas.
"We are in favour of dialogue but it is impossible to make progress in a situation which is extremely dangerous," he added.
Bureau Report