WORLD> Middle East
Palestinian PM submits resignation
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-03-07 20:12

RAMALLAH, West Bank -- The Palestinian prime minister said Saturday he submitted his resignation in a move that could help usher in a power-sharing deal between Western-backed President Mahmoud Abbas and his rivals in the militant group Hamas.


In this photo released by the Palestinian Authority, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, left, shakes hands with President Mahmoud Abbas as he submits his resignation at Abbas' headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, March 7, 2009. [Agencies] 

Salam Fayyad's resignation was meant to be a goodwill gesture toward Hamas, but the group's officials dismissed the announcement, saying Fayyad's appointment and time in office has been unconstitutional.

Abbas appointed Fayyad as Prime Minister after Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in June 2007. The takeover effectively created two separate Palestinian administrations - an internationally backed government in the West Bank led by Abbas and technocrat Fayyad, and a blockaded government in the coastal patch of Gaza run by Hamas.

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Fayyad said in a statement Saturday he hoped to pave the way for a unity government. "This step comes in the efforts to form a national conciliation government," he said.

Fayyad said his resignation would take effect after the formation of a Palestinian unity government but no later than the end of March. The announcement came before the resumption of power-sharing talks on Tuesday between Abbas' Fatah and officials from Hamas, expected to take place in Cairo.

The rivals held an initial round of reconciliation talks in late February, agreeing to form separate committees to deal with grievances between the two sides, and to form a caretaker government to usher in new presidential and legislative elections.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum dismissed Fayyad's announcement.

"This government did not work for the sake of the Palestinians, it worked for its own agenda. This end was expected for a government that was illegal and unconstitutional," Barhoum said.