Hamas and Fatah have agreed to hold the first elections in Palestine in nearly 15 years, Agence France Presse (AFP) reported.
Following a meeting at the Palestinian Embassy in Istanbul, a press release was issued that confirmed the two biggest Palestinian factions had reached “a unified vision”.
“We agree that the vision has matured and we plan to move ahead with a nationwide dialogue with the participation of all factions under the patronage of President Mahmoud Abbas to take place before the first of October,” the statement said.
"Whilst elections may seem like an important democratic process, holding elections in the West Bank and Gaza Strip given the current status quo would be antithetical to democracy."
A must-read by @yarahawari given the recent Fatah-Hamas talks on elections https://t.co/4cLBumFMEu
— Al-Shabaka الشبكة (@AlShabaka) September 24, 2020
Parliamentary and presidential polls will be scheduled within six months under a deal agreed by Fatah, Palestinian Authority (PA) leader Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh.
The deputy head of Hamas’ political bureau, Saleh Al-Arouri, said:
“This time we reached a real consensus. Divisions have damaged our national cause and we are working to end that.”
#Abbas Asks #Turkey to Support Internal #Reconciliation, #Election Plans https://t.co/ki9BFPeUIL via @PalestineChron pic.twitter.com/xFBrYlyGjp
— @palestinechron (@PalestineChron) September 23, 2020
WAFA news agency quoted Fatah Secretary-General Jibril Rajoub saying that the elections will take place in three stages within six months.
“We will have legislative elections, followed by presidential elections and then elections for the Palestine National Council wherever possible.”
The last Palestinian parliamentary elections were held in 2006 when Hamas won by an unexpected landslide, internal divisions began a year later due to the conflict after Abbas refused to step down from office.
(MEMO, PC, Social Media)