国际英语新闻:Israel says Palestinian unity gov't not accepted unless Hamas disarms
JERUSALEM, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- Israel said on Thursday that it would not recognize the unified Fatah-Hamas Palestinian government unless Hamas disarmed and stopped calling for Israel's destruction.
"As long as Hamas does not disarm and keeps calling for Israel's destruction, Israel holds it responsible for all terror activities that come from Gaza," Israel's Prime Minister's office said in a statement.
"Any appeasement between the Palestinian National Authority and Hamas must include compliance with international agreements, compliance with the conditions of the Quartet," the statement read, referring to a demand for Hamas' recognition of the State of Israel.
Israel seized the Gaza Strip and the West Bank during the 1967 Middle East war and has controlled these territories ever since, despite international condemnation.
Earlier on Thursday, the two Palestinian rival factions - the Ramallah-seated Fatah and the Islamist movement of Hamas - agreed to end their long-time rift following talks mediated by Egypt in Cairo.
Under the agreement, the consensus government under Fatah will have full control over Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip by Dec. 1.
The agreement is considered as a resumption of a stalled reconciliation deal reached in Cairo in 2011.
相关文章
- 欧美文化:Spanish government sacks spy chief after phone tapping scandal
- 欧美文化:Indian gov't asks TV channels to refrain from airing misleading, provocative content
- 欧美文化:News Analysis: U.S. recession fear mounts, but downturn not inevitable
- 欧美文化:Finnish government submits security report preparing for NATO membership
- 欧美文化:Biden says pandemic not over, receives 2nd COVID-19 booster shot
- 欧美文化:Experts warn another uptick in COVID-19 cases due to new variant
- 欧美文化:German gov't approves procurement of COVID-19 vaccines until 2029
- 欧美文化:Slovenian government limits gasoline prices to curb price hikes
- 欧美文化:Noticeable increase in U.S. air activity near Russia's borders: Russian Security Council
- 欧美文化:Canadian gov't outlines steps to end protests under public order emergency