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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Barghouti wants popular action
2009-11-20
[Al Arabiya Latest] Peace talks with Israel have failed and the Palestinians must launch popular and diplomatic campaigns to achieve statehood, Marwan Barghouti said in an interview from his prison cell.
Whatever that means.
Still popular and articulate despite five years behind bars, the 50-year-old activist is seen by some as a Palestinian Nelson Mandela, the man who could galvanize a drifting and divided national movement if only he were set free by Israel.

With U.S. peace diplomacy at a standstill, Barghouti said, there is no justification for the split between the Fatah movement he belongs to and the Hamas Islamists who control Gaza. "I do not see that there are fundamental political differences between Fatah and Hamas," said Barghouti, a leading figure in the two Intifadas, or uprisings against Israeli occupation, waged by the Palestinians since 1987.

Convicted of murder for his role in attacks on Israelis, Barghouti was jailed for life by Israel in 2004 during the second Intifada, which broke out in 2000.

From his prison cell he responded in writing to questions from Reuters delivered by his lawyers.

Before his arrest, Barghouti had been seen as a contender to succeed Yasser Arafat as Palestinian leader, a position assumed by current Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas after Arafat's death in 2004.

Though behind bars, he is still popular and still seen as a possible successor to Abbas, who has no obvious heir.
Abbas being the kind of man described as over there as, "He fathered only daughters."
"In the shadow of the failure of negotiations and the absence of an Israeli partner for peace, the necessary strategy is firstly ending the division and restoring national unity," Barghouti said.
I think that's actually a brilliant idea -- get the Palestinian house in order before bothering Israel again.
"There is no excuse in the world that prevents national reconciliation, especially in light of the latest developments and the blocked horizon for negotiations," he said.
Hear, hear!
The divisions among Palestinians, which Barghouti described as "a crime against the nation", boiled over in 2007 when Hamas seized control of Gaza, splintering the national movement.

He urged Hamas to sign an Egyptian reconciliation blueprint so legislative and presidential elections can be held.
I truly wish them luck with that.
Posted by:Fred

#2  People in Hell want ice water.
Posted by: mojo   2009-11-20 16:10  

#1  "I do not see that there are fundamental political differences between Fatah and Hamas," said Barghouti

Nothing goes past him.
Posted by: twobyfour   2009-11-20 00:35  

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