Hamas has issued a statement calling on the Palestinian president and Fatah leader, Mahmoud Abbas, to resume power-sharing talks and threatening to use all open options if the deadlock persists.
"We remind the president that we have open options to deal with the ongoing crisis, but we prefer the national option, which is in harmony with our national unity," Hamas said on Thursday.
Aljazeera said Hamas also accused Fatah of imposing conditions that fell in line with US demands, adding that these had been rejected nationally.
The Islamist group called for a resumption of efforts for forming a national unity government, sidestepping
Mahir Miqdad, a spokesman for Fatah, rejected the accusation that Abbas and Fatah-linked organisations were impeding the formation of a national unity government.
In an interview to Aljazeera, Miqdad said Fatah was ready to consider all points of view that might help reach agreement on the subject of national unity government.
Qatari mediation
In other developments,
A Hamas official told The Associated Press that Shaikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabor al-Thani came to Syria to try to end the standoff between the ruling Hamas group and the Fatah Party in the Palestinian territories.
The official, who asked to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the talks, said
Conditions in the West Bank and
Recent violence
Violence erupted on Sunday when Hamas fighters confronted members of the Fatah-dominated security forces who were protesting at the government's inability to pay their wages.
Ten people were killed and around 100 wounded in ensuing street battles over three days.
It said the two sides discussed during the meeting "the latest on inter-Palestinian dialogue and the need to support Palestinian national unity at this sensitive time in the region".
Photo Caption
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president