| Palestinian parliament strengthens Abbas(AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-14 09:21
 
 The Palestinian parliament used its final session Monday to give President 
Mahmoud Abbas broad new powers, infuriating Hamas days before the Islamic group 
takes control of a suddenly weakened legislature. 
 The measures were designed to preserve Abbas' control over the Palestinian 
Authority, though it was unlikely to assuage international concerns about 
dealing with a Hamas-led government. 
 Hamas officials said they would immediately try to overturn the laws after 
the new parliament is sworn in Saturday. 
 "I think this session was illegal. It is a kind of bloodless coup," said 
Abdel Aziz Duaik, an incoming Hamas legislator. The new law "puts complete 
authority in the hands of the president." 
 Abbas' Fatah Party, which dominated Palestinian politics for four decades, 
was roundly defeated by Hamas in Jan. 25 parliamentary elections. Abbas was 
elected last year to a four-year term. 
 In their final session with a parliamentary majority, Fatah lawmakers gave 
Abbas the authority to appoint a new, nine-judge constitutional court, which 
would serve as the final arbiter in disputes between himself and a Hamas 
parliament and Cabinet. The court could also veto legislation deemed to violate 
the Palestinians' Basic Law, which acts as a quasi-constitution. 
 Legal expert Issam Abdeen said the legislation would essentially give Abbas 
power over what laws the new parliament passed "since he is the one who appoints 
the judges of the constitutional court." 
 "He can use (these powers) to nullify laws that are unacceptable to him. If 
Hamas now approves Islamic laws, he could say it is against the constitution," 
Abdeen said. 
 Hamas spokesman Said Siyam called parliament's actions "illegitimate" and 
said Hamas would overturn the laws when the new parliament takes over. 
 "The parliament has no mandate and no authority to issue any new 
legislation," he said. 
 Hamas, which won 74 seats in the 132-member parliament, would need a 
two-thirds majority — or 88 seats — to buck Abbas and change the legislation 
passed Monday. Fatah controls 45 seats and could block a coalition of Hamas and 
smaller parties from revoking the law if it maintains party unity. 
 Lawmakers also appointed Fatah loyalists to four key jobs, including the head 
of the government watchdog group in charge of weeding out corruption. Hamas won 
election on a platform promising to end years of Fatah nepotism, graft and 
mismanagement. 
 
 
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