The Palestinian government welcomed Monday the announced agreements between Hamas and Fatah to hold the first legislative elections since 2006, asserting its readiness to prepare for the electoral process.
Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said during opening remarks at the weekly cabinet meeting in Ramallah that the government "welcomes the positive developments at the electoral level and the Palestinian reconciliation, reflected in Hamas's approval to hold elections in succession."
The elections will start first with the Legislative Council, followed with another to decide the head of the Palestinian Authority and finally with National Council elections.
Last week, Hamas sent a letter to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas expressing the Movement’s approval to the process.
The PM said his government would place its entire potentials and efforts in the next phase.
“We want the elections to represent the end of the split in the history of our people and the start of democracy that would push our case and our institutions closer towards peace, independence, the end of occupation and the formation of a state along the 1967 borders,” he said.
Elections have not been held in Palestine since 2006, when Hamas scored a surprise victory. Israel, the United States, the European Union and others consider Hamas a terrorist organization.
Meanwhile, the secretary-general of Fatah's Central Committee, Jibril Rajoub, met in Ramallah Monday with Egyptian Ambassador to Palestine Tareq Tayel and informed him about the latest political developments in Palestine, especially regarding the national dialogue between Hamas and Fatah and the letter received by Abbas from Ismail Haniyeh, head of Hamas’ political bureau.
Rajoub affirmed that Fatah’s commitment to the agreement reached with Hamas to hold elections and end the division between the two rival parties.
The official also praised Cairo, which sponsors the intra-Palestinian reconciliation talks, for its contribution in removing all obstacles hindering an agreement between the two sides.