Monday, June 05, 2006

Palestinian Terrorist are at Loggerheads Among Themselves

Internal strife among fellow murdering terrorist has developed in recent days. The strife surrounds legitimate recognition of Israel as a sovereign nation. The problem: The PA is dependent on funds from international sources. Primarily that source is the EU and to a lesser extent America.

The difficulty the PA faces is that much of the funds has been tied to recognizing the existence of Jewish Israel. This should not be a problem except for one little detail: the duly elected Parliamentarian government is ran by Hamas. Hamas and fellow murderers Islamic Jihad have gone on record that they will never recognize the right of existence of Jewish Israel.

Now enters the politics of Mahmoud Abbas. Abbas (leader of Fatah, Chairman of the PLO and President of the PA) is the duly elected President of the Palestine Authority. Abbas understands the political game and desires the money to keep flowing from the kafir into the PA treasury. Abbas is more like abyss bound predecessor Arafat. Abbas is a murdering terrorist that clearly operates under the Mohammedan principle of al Taqiyya (Deceive the kafir). To the credit of Hamas, they have forsake the duplicity of al taqiyya and have gone to the throat of their goal: the Destruction of Jewish Israel.

Abbas firm on Monday ultimatum
Hamas, Islamic Jihad reject threat of referendum
ICEJ E-News Brief

At the conclusion of a meeting Monday with EU envoy Javier Solana, Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas stressed that the Monday-night deadline for Hamas to accept the "prisoners document" - recognizing an Israeli state on the 1967 borders or agreeing to a referendum on the issue - still stands. Ynet News reports that five Palestinian factions, including Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, have already rejected the ultimatum and called on the chairman to continue the dialogue between the groups over the so-called "National Reconciliation Document."

Despite ongoing negotiations Palestinian sources have told Ynet that the chance of a compromise between the power-hungry factions is very unlikely, and Abbas will probably declare a referendum on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, eyewitnesses in Gaza reported massive deployments of Hamas and Fatah gunmen and Monday morning saw firefights between the factions that left five dead, including a 20-year-old woman who was eight months pregnant.

Also Monday, Palestinian sources told news agencies that prominent Hamas terrorist Ahmed Sari was killed and two of his relatives injured - one of them an 8-year-old girl - when a large bomb exploded outside his home in the northern Gaza Strip. In response to what they are calling an assassination, Hamas gunmen stormed the offices of Fatah-controlled Palestine TV, destroying equipment and beating employees, according to Reuters.

No comments: