Hamas accuses Abbas of sabotaging unity government

PA president's verbal attacks on Islamist rivals only 'play into the hands of the Americans and the Israelis,' spokesman says

Khaled Mashaal, political leader of Hamas (left), meets with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Cairo, Egypt, December 21, 2011. (photo credit: AP)

GAZA CITY — Hamas on Monday accused Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas of trying to sabotage a fragile reconciliation agreement after he accused them of running “a shadow government” in Gaza.

In a sharply worded attack on Hamas, Abbas on Saturday threatened to break off the unity agreement over the group’s de facto control of the Gaza Strip.

But Abbas’s words sparked an angry response from Hamas, with spokesman Fawzi Barhoum accusing him in turn of trying “to destroy the reconciliation and play into the hands of the Americans and the Israelis.”

Hamas forcibly took over the Gaza Strip in 2007, ousting forces loyal to Abbas and sparking a bitter and bloody split with his Fatah movement, which continued for years until the two sides signed a reconciliation deal in April.

The deal led to the formation of a government of national consensus, which took office on June 2, following which Gaza’s Hamas government formally stepped down.

The spat erupted just two weeks after the end of a major 50-day conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

Throughout the conflict, Hamas and Fatah mostly put up a united front, and eventually an open-ended ceasefire took effect on August 26. But as the guns fell silent, their long-held divisions again came to the fore.

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