Hamas: No room to implement long-term truce with Israel at present
Gaza - Hamas will not implement a long-term truce with Israel for the time being, a senior official of the Islamist organization said Sunday.
The offer "was not cancelled," Mahmoud al-Zahar said, but added that there was "no room to implement it for the time being" since "there is no one to talk about this proposal with on the other (Israeli) side."
He said a long-term truce was "a project that can be developed when there are intentions."
The Hamas long-term truce offer was first made by the organization's late spiritual advisor, Ahmed Yassin, who suggested a 20-year-long ceasefire, without recognizing the Jewish state's right to exist, in return for an Israeli withdrawal from lands captured in the 1967 Middle East war.
Zahar's remarks were made a day after Hamas leader Ismail Haniya said his government could accept a Palestinian state only in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, the territories occupied by Israel in the 1967 war.
The Hamas charter calls for an Islamic state in all of historic Palestine, which includes Israel.
Haniya made his statements at a meeting with 11 European parliamentarians who sailed into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip to defy Israel's blockade on the territory.
He said Israel rejected his offer, which also included a long-term truce.
A June 19 truce between Israel and the Gaza militant groups, Hamas included, was severely battered this week after Israel killed 5 militants when it destroyed a tunnel being dug under the Gaza-Israel border, and the militias responded with rocket barrages on southern Israel. (dpa)