Prime Minister Netanyahu condemns anti-Israel
remarks at Hamas 25th anniversary celebration, saying "we have always
overcome these threats" • At rally attended by hundreds of thousands of
Hamas supporters, organization's political chief Khaled Mashaal says
"Palestine is ours."
"My dream is to die as a
martyr for Gaza and for Jerusalem" Khaled Mashaal kissing the ground on
his first ever visit to Gaza Friday.
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Photo credit: Reuters |
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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed
this weekend's celebrations in Gaza — marking the 25th anniversary of
Hamas and the arrival of Hamas politburo chief Khaled Mashaal — telling
his cabinet on Sunday that the event proved that the Palestinians did
not intend to compromise with Israel.
Referring to the fiery anti-Israel speeches
made by Hamas officials at the rally, the prime minister said that "In
the last 24 hours we glimpsed, once again, the true face of our enemies.
They have no intention to compromise with us, they want to destroy our
country, and obviously they will fail. Throughout our history, the
people of Israel have always overcome such threats."
On Saturday, in a defiant speech during his
first ever visit to Gaza, Mashaal told a mass rally he would never
recognize Israel and pledged to "free the land of Palestine inch by
inch."
"Palestine is ours, from the river to the
sea," Mashaal said, referring to all the territory between the Jordan
River and the Mediterranean Sea, including Jerusalem.
On Sunday, Netanyahu slammed Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas for failing to condemn the inciting
Hamas remarks. "Sadly, Abbas is working toward reunification with Hamas,
which is supported by Iran. He didn't condemn the calls to wipe out
Israel, just like he didn't condemn the rockets that were fired [from
Gaza] at Israel," the prime minister said.
Netanyahu stressed that he was ready to
withstand international pressure and vowed that he would not abandon
Israel's interests. "We want true peace with our neighbors," he said.
"But we don't shut our eyes. We don't bury our heads in the sand."
"We refuse to repeat the mistake of unilateral
withdrawal, and other withdrawals that essentially gave rise to Hamas'
power in Gaza," Netanyahu said, referring mainly to the 2005 Israeli
withdrawal from settlements in Gaza.
"I am always amazed at the delusions of those who are willing to continue this process and call it peace," Netanyahu continued.
On Saturday, Mark Regev, a spokesman for Netanyahu, also condemned the comments and called them an obstacle to peace.
"Today we heard from Hamas in Gaza a hateful
and extremist message, a message that says no to peace and no to
reconciliation, a message that says every Israeli man, woman and child
is a legitimate target."
"That sort of extremism won't help peace, the
opposite is true. And I would ask Palestinian [Authority] President, Mr.
[Mahmoud] Abbas, if you see Hamas as a political partner, what does
that say about your dedication to peace," Regev said.
"We heard a very crystal clear message of hate
that Israel should be destroyed and that the Jewish state should be
wiped out of the map," he said.
Hamas' charter calls for the destruction of
Israel but its leaders have, at times, indicated a willingness to
negotiate a prolonged truce in return for a retreat to the 1967 borders,
something Mashaal made no mention of at Saturday's event.
Mashaal, born in the West Bank in 1956, left
with his family for exile in 1967 after Israel captured the territory.
He now spends his time between Cairo and Qatar, and was expected to
cross back into Egypt on Sunday or Monday to resume his position as
Hamas' key point person with foreign donors.
Saturday's rally in Gaza, marking 25 years
since Hamas was founded, was attended by hundreds of thousands of people
— Hamas supporters from Gaza and the entire Arab world — including
Hamas' top leaders, namely Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh.
The group decorated the speakers podium with a
huge model of an M-75 rocket — the type of rocket Hamas fired at Tel
Aviv and Jerusalem during the latest round of violence.
Mashaal arrived in Gaza on Friday through the
Rafah border crossing with Egypt, accompanied by his deputy, Moussa Abu
Marzouk, and other senior Hamas officials. According to Arab media
reports, Mashaal wore a bulletproof vest throughout his Gaza stay.
Mashaal, who kissed the ground when he entered
Gaza, said Friday that "God be blessed. My dream is to die as a martyr
for Gaza and for Jerusalem. We will not stop at 1967 borders, we will
continue to 1948 borders, until the liberation of occupied Palestine. We
will continue to be a thorn in the Zionist enemy's side."
A Hamas military spokesman also took the
podium, saying, "we will continue on the path of Ahmed Jabari," the
Hamas military commander who was assassinated by Israeli forces on Nov.
14, sparking Operation Pillar of Defense. "We vow to continue the jihad
(holy war) and the resistance until we vanquish the occupation and
purify our holy sites. All of Gaza thanks Turkey and Iran for supporting
our resistance."
Mashaal, who took the stage to the sound of
cheers and adoration, said that "the crimes of Israel against the
Palestinian people, our land and our holy sites, only serve to intensify
our continued resistance. We will remain loyal to Jerusalem, to al-Aqsa
and to our holy places and we won't give up a single inch of occupied
Palestine."
"The Zionist enemy will continue to suffer
defeats until they are gone from here," Mashaal continued. "We are not
afraid of [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu. We are not afraid
of anyone. We will continue with the resistance until we achieve
victory. Palestine is Arab and Muslim. We will not recognize the Israeli
occupation. Israel and the occupation are not legitimate. Israel's
attempts to falsify history and falsify facts will fail."
In a jab directed at Abbas, who told Israeli
television last month that he does not intend to return to his
birthplace, Safed, Mashaal said that, "we won't give up Jerusalem or
Haifa or Beersheba or Safed."
Mashaal also mentioned Operation Pillar of
Defense, the latest round of violence between Israel and Gaza terrorists
which ended with a cease-fire agreement last month, saying, "resistance
is not a goal, it is a means. I ask of the world: If you know of a
different means of liberating Palestine and Jerusalem and the refugees,
please tell us. We have been trying for 64 years, and only resistance
has proven effective."
"We are not fighting the Jews for being Jews,
but rather the Zionists and their aggression, for having stolen our
land," Mashaal added.
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman later
issued a response to the rally, saying that, "the bombastic declarations
and boastful words in Gaza come only as an effort to mask the great
blow Hamas suffered during Operation Pillar of Defense. The proof is the
fact that since the day the operation ended, there has been complete
calm in the south and they haven't dared shoot or provoke Israel again."
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