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  Hamas, Fatah gunmen battle over vote result   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-01-28 07:49   Compounding the Palestinian Authority's worries, the United States said 
it will review "all aspects" of its aid programs to the Palestinians if Hamas is 
in the government. 
 "To be very clear, we do not provide money to terrorist organizations," said 
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack. 
 Divided Opinion 
 An opinion poll in Israel's Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper showed 48 percent of 
Israelis favored talking to a Hamas-led Palestinian government, while 43 percent 
were opposed. 
 
 
 
 
   Fatah supporters chant slogans and wave Fatah 
 flags during a protest in Gaza City January 27, 2006. Fatah activists 
 burned cars in an angry protest outside the Palestinian parliament 
 building in Gaza City on Friday after the party's shock election defeat to 
 the Islamic militant group Hamas, witnesses said. 
 [Reuters] |   
Israel holds a general election on March 28 and interim Prime Minister Ehud 
Olmert, whose centrist Kadima party is the front-runner, has hinted at 
unilateral moves to set a border with the Palestinians on Israeli terms. 
 Israel has already pulled its settlers out of the Gaza Strip without 
negotiations, citing the current Palestinian government's failure to rein in 
militants. 
 "In the Gaza disengagement, Israel opened a window of opportunity. With these 
elections, the Palestinians have slammed it shut," Israeli Foreign Minister 
Tzipi Livni said in Tel Aviv. 
 Speaking in Damascus, Moussa Abu Marzouk, a senior Hamas official, said the 
movement had a "clear vision for a government of unity -- one in which everyone 
joins." 
 But thousands of Fatah supporters, who held protests across Gaza, rejected 
any coalition with Hamas and called on Fatah's veteran leadership to resign over 
the debacle. "Corrupt Fatah leaders who caused the election defeat must resign. 
Fatah must renew itself," one protester shouted through a loudspeaker. 
 Hamas's capture of 76 seats in the 132-member parliament -- against 43 for 
Fatah -- was widely seen as a political earthquake in the Middle East, triggered 
by voter anger at Fatah over corruption and the failure of peace efforts. 
 Hamas has mostly respected a truce for nearly a year, but says it will not 
give up its guns or its charter demand for an Islamic state to encompass Israel, 
the West Bank and Gaza.   
  
  
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