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Palestinians agree January election

Palestinians agree January election

Rival Palestinian factions have agreed to hold elections by January next year after holding negotiations in Cairo over a unity government.

 
However, at the conclusion of the Egyptian-mediated talks late on Sunday, Fatah and Hamas - the biggest Palestinian groups - continued to differ over a few points, including who would be in the new government.
 
Some Western governments have been pushing for a Palestinian government run by non-partisan politicians and technocrats.
 
Wasil Abou Youssef, secretary-general of the Palestine Liberation Front, one of the groups taking part in Sunday's talks, told Egypt's state-run Middle East News Agency that they had agreed to hold joint presidential and legislative elections by January 25, 2010.
 
Sticking points
 
Last month, Palestinian factions had agreed to form five committees to tackle issues such as the composition of security agencies in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
 
Reform of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), one of Hamas's demands, has also still to be agreed.
 
The PLO - dominated by Fatah and allied groups - has represented the Palestinians since 1964. More recent groups, such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad, have never been a part of the organization, despite enjoying popular support.
 
Among the new government's tasks will be to lead the reconstruction of Gaza, which saw billions of dollars worth of damage during a three-week Israeli offensive earlier in the year.
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
A Palestinian boy inspects the rubble of a mosque, which was destroyed in an Israeli strike, in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip.
 
Al-Jazeera

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