Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas chief Khalid Mishal met to explore the formation of an interim Palestinian government to oversee the preparations for the polls and discuss the implementation of a reconciliation deal.
“We agreed on the importance of holding the elections quickly… and removing any obstacles that might delay the polls,” said Fatah spokesman Azzam al-Ahmad, who is accompanying Abbas in Doha.
He said the talks, which are being hosted by HH the Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, were “positive” and that both sides reached “agreement on all the major issues” regarding the reconciliation agreement, including the formation of a transitional government made up of independents.
According to a statement released on Qatar’s official QNA news agency, the two parties also discussed the stalled peace talks with Israel.
Speaking to AFP earlier this week, Ahmad had said that yesterday’s discussions would also address a planned Cairo meeting bringing together all Palestinian leaders, which had originally been set for February 2 but was delayed indefinitely.
Ismail Haniya, who heads the Hamas government in Gaza, was in Qatar earlier this week and is currently in Bahrain on the second leg of a Gulf tour that will also take him to Iran.
Under the terms of a reconciliation deal signed by Hamas and Abbas’s Fatah movement in April 2011, parliamentary and presidential elections are to be held by May. However, implementation of the deal has been delayed on several occasions despite repeated meetings between the parties involved. The last Palestinian elections were held in 2006.