Hamas Gets $50 M Boost From Iran
As Funds Dwindle, Palestinian Party Gets Monetary Pledge From Iran
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Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, left, shakes hands with exiled Palestinian Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal, in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, April, 16, 2006. Iran has pledged $50 million to the Palestinian Authority. (AP Photo)
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Meanwhile, Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh on Sunday called an emergency meeting with rival Palestinian factions amid rising tensions between the groups and a spike in violence with Israel.
Tensions have heightened in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in recent days since Haniyeh accused the moderate Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, of trying to undermine the new Hamas-led government. Abbas aides have called Haniyeh's comments unacceptable.
The infighting, along with an Israeli offensive in the northern Gaza Strip, has compounded the troubles of Haniyeh's fledgling government, which is coping with a financial crisis that has left it broke and unable to pay the salaries of its thousands of workers.
Representatives of Abbas' Fatah movement and Islamic Jihad, a small group responsible for much of the violence with Israel, were expected to participate in Sunday's midday meeting. But Fatah officials did not show up. Officials were not immediately available for comment.
Ahead of the meeting, Islamic Jihad's exiled leader, Ramadan Shallah, rejected calls to halt attacks. Speaking during a conference in Iran, Shallah said rocket fire and suicide attacks would continue.
"Firing rockets will continue," he said in a statement posted on the group's Web site. He also said his group is making "nonstop efforts" to infiltrate suicide bombers from the West Bank into Israel. He said an Israeli military crackdown "might limit this effort, but it's not going to stop it."
Israel has stepped up an offensive in the northern Gaza Strip, firing artillery shells and carrying out airstrikes to halt rocket attacks aimed at Israeli towns. At least 16 Palestinians, including 13 militants and a young girl, have been killed. No Israelis have died in the rocket fire.
Hamas, which has honored a yearlong cease-fire with Israel, has not participated in the attacks. But sworn to Israel's destruction, it has done little to stop them.
Since taking office two weeks ago, Hamas has come under intense international pressure to renounce violence and recognize Israel's right to exist. Western donors have cut off tens of millions of dollars in direct aid, and Israel has suspended the monthly transfer of tax it collects for the Palestinians.
Despite the financial crisis, Hamas has refused to moderate its ideology. On Friday, Haniyeh accused Abbas of forming "an unholy alliance" with the international community to weaken Hamas.
Abbas, who was elected separately last year, has taken several steps to consolidate power, enraging Hamas leaders. He has appointed allies to key security positions and sent his personal security force to guard Gaza's vital border crossing with Egypt.
The moves prompted Haniyeh to declare Friday that he is not a "puppet." Fatah officials, in turn, accuse the new leadership of sidelining and punishing Fatah officials in government positions.
Ahmad Abderahman, a Fatah spokesman, said Sunday that Hamas is responsible for the Palestinians' problems and urged the group to accept Abbas' goal of restarting peace talks with Israel. He called on Hamas to accept previous peace deals with Israel reached over the past decade.
"Hamas is blaming President Mahmoud Abbas, but it should not blame anyone but itself," he said. "Hamas needs to review its positions as soon as possible. Without doing so, the crisis will worsen."
Hamas has rejected the international community's calls to renounce violence and recognize past peace agreements. Instead, it has sent top officials on a tour of the Arab and Muslim world in hopes of raising enough money to keep the government afloat.
But time may be running out. In the first major sign of discontent with the Hamas-led government, dozens of masked Palestinian police officers on Saturday blocked a main road in the Gaza Strip and briefly seized a government building to protest the delay in paying their salaries.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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