Palestinian prime minister attacks Blair policies
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas accused British Prime Minister Tony Blair on Sept. 9 of "one-sided" policies that have punished the Palestinian people and their elected government.
Haniyeh, in a column in Britain's Guardian newspaper ahead of Blair's visit to the region, said there were signs that "the British public is unhappy about what Blair's government has been doing to our people."
"The problem has been the unquestioning attachment of Tony Blair's government to the Clinton and then Bush administrations, which have seen the Middle East through Israeli eyes only," Haniyeh said.
"Is this a public relations exercise as he enters his last days of premiership, or is he bringing some new initiative to break the deadlock created by his and his friend's policies?" Haniyeh asked in the newspaper column.
Blair, who has ruled for nearly a decade, said on Sept. 7 that he would resign within a year but refused to set a precise date for his departure.
Haniyeh said Blair's visit to the region could have been an opportunity for face-to-face talks with democratically elected Hamas leaders. But Haniyeh said "that is not possible since [Blair's] government has decided not to recognize mine."
Britain has backed a Western aid boycott of the Hamas-led government, preventing it from paying salaries to 165,000 workers since March. Partial payments have been made in recent months using funds from European and Arab donors.
Haniyeh said Blair's policies amounted to "collective punishment" of the Palestinian people and gave a green light to Israel to take military action.
Israel launched an offensive in Gaza after militants seized an Israeli soldier in a cross-border raid on June 25. An estimated 226 Palestinians, about half of them civilians, have been killed.
Haniyeh accused Blair of caring more about freeing three captured Israeli soldiers–one held by Gaza militants and two by Hezbollah guerillas in Lebanon–than about the fate of Hamas government ministers, Hamas lawmakers and thousands of other Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
"The arrest of these ministers and MPs–five ministers, 33 MPs, including my deputy and the speaker of the legislative council–is a violation of the most fundamental principles of democracy, but this appears to be immaterial to Mr. Blair," Haniyeh said.
Blair has come under fire at home during Israel's 34-day war with Hezbollah for lining up with the United States in refusing to back Lebanon's demands for an immediate truce.