The leader of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip has criticised the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas for comments he made to Israeli media, saying that they contradict long-held Palestinian territorial demands.
Abbas made the rare if symbolic concession to Israel on Thursday, saying he had no permanent claim on the town from which he was driven as a child during the 1948 war of the Jewish state’s founding.
Ismail Haniyeh said on Friday that Abbas’ remarks on the right of return for Palestinian refugees, aired on Israel’s Channel 2, were “extremely dangerous”.
In his comments, Abbas said: “Palestine now for me is [19]67 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital … This is now and forever, this is Palestine for me.
I am a refugee but living in Ramallah. I believe that West Bank and Gaza is Palestine. The rest is Israel.”
The president said that while he would like to see his birthplace – Safed, now a town in northern Israel – he does not want to live there.
“I want to see Safed. It is my right to see it but not to live there,” he said.
Statehood
The remarks came ahead of a UN bid that would see Palestinians gain partial statehood recognition in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The comments appear to have been meant to mollify Israel that Palestinians did not lay claim to lands taken for Israel in 1948, nor seek to run them over demographically.
Palestinians hope the vote will force Israel to withdraw from its current positions to lines it held before the 1967 war or face international legal action.
Israel says negotiations alone will fix borders between it and any future Palestine.
But Abbas’ comments backfired among some of his people as he touched on one of the most sensitive issues at the heart of Israel-Palestinian conflict: the fate of refugees who fled, or were forced to flee their homes, in the fighting surrounding Israel’s creation in 1948.
They and their descendants now number more than five million.
‘Never give up’
Gaza’s Hamas movement, alongside many other Palestinians, said Abbas’ remarks suggested millions of refugees and their descendants would not return to the places they fled in wars with Israel.
“It is not possible for any person, regardless of who he is, a person, a president, government, or authority, to give up on Palestinian land or to give up the right of return to our homes that we were forced out from,” Haniyeh said.
Palestinians who spoke to AP Television on Friday also agreed that no refugee will give up on their homeland.
“Anyone who was forced out of his land in [19]48 will never give up his land,” Hisham Farraj, who lives in the Al-Jalazon refugee camp, said.
The refugee issue has been a big obstacle in peace talks. Israel says their entry would be demographic suicide and expects refugees to be taken in by a future Palestinian state.