France has opened political contacts with Hamas

Paris - French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner on Monday confirmed a newspaper report that France had opened political contacts with the radical Islamic group Hamas.

"It is necessary to have contacts," Kouchner told Europe 1 radio. "These are not relations, but contacts. We must be able to talk to each other."

Kouchner's statement confirmed a story in Monday's edition of the French daily Le Figaro which reported that the first contact between Paris and Hamas occurred about one month earlier, in Hamas- controlled Gaza.

The talks were between a retired high-ranking French diplomat named Yves Aubin de La Messuziere and senior Hamas leaders Mahmoud al-Zahar and Ismail Haniya.

La Messuziere, a former French ambassador to Iraq, told Le Figaro that his mission had not been official.

"I told Hamas they must fulfil as much as possible the conditions imposed by the West before official talks with them can begin," he said.

These conditions include renouncing terrorism, recognizing the state of Israel and approving agreements signed between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

La Messuziere said he was told that Hamas was prepared to accept a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders, "which was equivalent to an indirect recognition of Israel."

"They said they were willing to stop terrorist attacks (on Israel) and, what surprised me, to recognize the legitimacy of (Palestinian President) Mahmoud Abbas," he said.

Until now, relations between France and Hamas had been limited to contacts between their intelligence services. These ended after Hamas seized the Gaza Strip by force in June 2007.

But two months later, French diplomats stationed in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem were told that intelligence contacts with the Islamic group could be renewed.

"Today, we are moving on to political contacts," a diplomat stationed in Jerusalem told Le Figaro. (dpa)