GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Hamas and Fatah security officials traded fire at
Gaza's border with Egypt on Tuesday as Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh passed
through on his way to reconciliation talks between his Hamas movement and the
rival Fatah group in Saudi Arabia, witnesses said.
Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh from
Hamas is seen during a cabinet meeting in Gaza City, Monday Feb. 5, 2007.
[AP] |
Haniyeh, who was in a VIP hall and
not in the immediate area of the firefight, crossed to Egypt unharmed, they
said. He had arrived at the border crossing under heavy guard after traveling
along a route lined with hundreds of Hamas gunmen on foot and in jeeps.
Although Haniyeh expressed confidence that the reconciliation talks would end
months of Palestinian infighting, Tuesday's gunbattle was an ominous sign for
the meeting in Mecca, which analysts have said could be the two sides' last
chance to avert civil war.
The 10-minute gunbattle at the border terminal caused no injuries, said the
witnesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of safety concerns.
Fatah and Hamas security officials offered a different version of events.
They said shots were fired in the air to disperse a crowd of thousands of people
who had tried to push through the border crossing after Haniyeh.
The passage - Gaza's gateway to the outside world - has been closed to
outgoing traffic since Jan. 8 because of Israeli security alerts.
The two groups have been clashing ever since Islamic Hamas militants unseated
President Mahmoud Abbas' long-ruling Fatah in parliamentary elections last year.
Although the separately elected Abbas remained in power, with considerable
authorities, Hamas' violently anti- Israel ideology has drawn punishing
sanctions by the West and Israel.
Abbas hopes a Hamas-Fatah coalition government would end the factional
violence and the sanctions.
Earlier rounds of talks, some brokered by Egypt, Syria and Qatar, foundered
over Hamas' refusal to recognize Israel's right to exist. Israel and Western
donor countries have said their sanctions won't be lifted until Hamas softens
its position.
The negotiations follow an especially bloody round of factional violence.
More than 30 people were killed and more than 200 were wounded in four days of
fighting before the factions ceased fire on Sunday.
Before setting off on the trip from his house to the border, Haniyeh sounded
upbeat about reaching a power-sharing agreement with Fatah.
"We will do all within our power to reach a Palestinian agreement on national
unity government," said Haniyeh, whose delegation is to be led by Hamas' exiled
leader, Khaled Mashaal. "We are optimistic and hopeful that we will succeed, and
return to our people with an agreement that can heal our wounds and end the
tension."
A senior Fatah official predicted the two sides would conclude an agreement
in Mecca.
Kadoura Fares, a former Cabinet minister who met with Mashaal in his Syria
headquarters last week, told Israel's Army Radio that nearly all obstacles have
been overcome during talks in recent weeks.