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WAR REPORT
Hamas must recognize Israel, top Egyptian official says
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 07, 2014


Arab priest sacked for backing service in Israel army
Jerusalem (AFP) May 08, 2014 - The Greek Orthodox church in the Holy Land has dismissed an Israeli Arab priest who publicly voiced support for Christian Arabs serving in Israel's army, a church spokesman said Thursday.

Spokesman Issa Musleh told AFP that ecclesiastical authorities decided Tuesday to fire Father Gabriel Nadaf from his post in Nazareth, but were only now making their decision public.

"We warned him before to keep to his priestly duties and not to interfere in matters of the army," Musleh said.

"When he did not heed our warning, we held a meeting of the church court which decided to sack him."

He said no written notification had been given to Nadaf. "We announce this now," he said.

Nadaf told AFP he had received no official notification of the sacking and dismissed reports that he had been fired as media speculation.

"The procedure for sacking anyone as a priest is to invite him to the patriarch's office where he will be presented with a letter of dismissal by the patriarch's secretary," he said.

"I have not received any call or letter from the patriarch's office."

Last month, Israel said it would start sending enlistment papers to all Christian Arabs of military service age, angering Arab MPs who accused the government of seeking to divide Christians from Muslims.

Service would not be compulsory for the 130,000 Christian Arabs as it is for Jews, an army spokesman said.

At present, about 100 Christian Arabs volunteer for military service each year.

The more than 1.3 million Muslim Arabs who are Israeli citizens would not be sent papers at all, the spokesman added.

Nadaf welcomed the move by the military.

"Young people in the Christian community need to understand the importance of serving and getting involved in the country in which they live and which protects them, and in which we are full citizens," he said last month.

He was also pictured in Israeli media sharing a stage with an army officer and Deputy Defence Minister Danny Danon, a hawkish member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, during a recruiting drive.

Bassel Ghattas, a member of the Israeli parliament for the communist Hadash party, urged Christians who received call-up papers to "send them back or publicly burn them, because the next step could be compulsory military or community service."

Israel's Arab minority, which makes up some 20 percent of the population, are the descendants of the 160,000 Palestinians who remained on their land when Israel was founded in 1948.

They complain of routine discrimination, particularly in housing, land access and employment.

Hamas must recognize the existence of Israel if the Palestinians are to move forward with their hopes of establishing their own state, former Egyptian foreign minister Amr Mussa said Wednesday.

"It is normal for the Palestinians to reconcile," Mussa said of a recent unity deal struck between the Hamas militants who run the Gaza Strip and the Palestinian Liberation Organization.

However, "I believe that Hamas should declare its acceptance of the Arab initiative of 2002, which is the map of normalization and recognition of the state of Israel together with the establishing of the Palestinian state and the withdrawal of the occupied territory," he insisted.

"If Hamas does do this, it would be a major step in the direction of formulating a favorable all-Palestinian policy towards the Palestinian-Israeli conflict."

Hamas and the Western-backed PLO, which is dominated by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas's secular Fatah party, signed a surprise reconciliation agreement on April 23 in a bid to end years of bitter and sometime bloody rivalry.

Under terms of the deal, the two sides would work together to form an "independent government" of technocrats, to be headed by Abbas, that would pave the way for long-delayed elections.

The move angered Israel, which has suspended its participation in US-led peace talks, saying it cannot be expected to negotiate with a government which includes members of a party dedicated to its destruction.

Egypt, which was once close to Hamas, has grown increasingly hostile to the militant movement after the Egyptian military ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi. Hamas is a Palestinian offshoot of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

The 2002 Arab Peace Initiative was launched by Saudi Arabia and backed by the Arab League.

Under the plan, Arab states would forge full diplomatic relations with the Jewish state in exchange for a withdrawal from land it occupied during the 1967 Six Day War or mutually-agreed upon land swaps.

Mussa, who was Egypt's top diplomat from 1991 to 2001 before becoming secretary general of the Arab League until 2011, is close to former military chief Abdel Fattah al-Sissi, who is tipped to win next month's elections in Egypt.

Abbas held "positive" talks with Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal in Doha Monday in the first meeting since their surprise unity deal last month, Palestinian officials said.

However, the deputy leader of Hamas, Mussa Abu Marzuq, insisted earlier this week that despite the unity deal his group would never recognize Israel.

"We will not recognize the Zionist entity," he told a press conference in Gaza City.

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