GAZA, June 9 (Xinhua) -- An official from Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas' Fatah movement on Monday called for applying measures on the ground to
pave the way for talks between his movement and rival Hamas.
"There should be measures to facilitate the dialogue," said Maher Helles, a
Gaza-based Fatah leader. The most important measures were stopping incitement on
the media and detentions the two sides commit, he added.
"Halting these measures will pave the way for looking for new mechanism to
translate President Abbas' initiative into action," Helles continued.
Last week, Abbas said he is ready to talk to Hamas which routed his forces
and ousted Fatah from Gaza Strip a year ago. Hamas, which rules Gaza Strip since
then, welcomed Abbas' call.
Political division between Gaza Strip and West Bank, which boosted when
Hamas took over Gaza, "harmed the Palestinian cause and the national project,"
Helles said, stressing that "it was time to resolve these problems."
Abbas fired Hamas-led government in June 2007 and formed a western-backed
cabinet based in West Bank while Hamas ignored Abbas' decisions. He also banned
any contact with Hamas until last Wednesday when the President launched his
initiative.
Meanwhile, Ayman Taha, a Hamas spokesman, said his movement doesn't mind
holding talks with Fatah "at any time, in any place and on any level."
"We support any measure paving the way to make the internal dialogue
successful according to President Abbas' initiative," Taha added, revealing
contacts between Hamas and Arab nations to host the dialogue.