(From the Al Qabas newspaper, Kuwait, August 22)
a) a) Halting and preventing further bloodshed among Palestinians and unifying the stance
against occupation through dialogue to resolve political differences.
b) b) forming
a Palestinian unity government.
c) c) revitalizing
and reforming the Palestine Liberation Organization, and accelerating the
efforts of the Preparatory Committee in line with the Cairo and Damascus
agreements.
d) d) upholding
the principle of political partnership based on existing Palestinian Authority
laws, emphasizing political pluralism.
Only weeks later, Hamas staged a coup against the Palestinian Authority and
seized control of the Gaza Strip, rendering the Mecca Agreement seemingly
ineffective.
In 2009, Egyptian mediation attempted to reconcile the
factions, giving rise to the Egyptian Paper, followed by the Cairo
Agreement in 2011. Yet, these efforts too yielded no meaningful results.
The Doha Agreement in 2012, facilitated by the
former emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, sought to accelerate
Palestinian national reconciliation. This was succeeded by the Beach Camp
Agreement in 2014. The negotiators agreed to form a Palestinian consensus
government and conduct elections within six months, a promise that fell
through. Accusations continued to be exchanged between the factions,
perpetuating the division.
In October 2017, the Cairo Agreement emerged yet
again, and both parties agreed to empower the Government of National Accord,
led by Rami Hamdallah, to assume full responsibilities in Gaza. They also
agreed that the Presidential Guard would oversee the crossings and the Rafah
border with Egypt. However, the division remained.
Now, in 2024, driven by urgency and the relentless war
on Gaza following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, the Palestinian factions have turned
their hopes to Beijing. They are seeking to sign yet another agreement, the Beijing
Declaration.
Neither the Mecca agreement nor the 13 subsequent
agreements over the years were honored. Will the Beijing Agreement be any
different?
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