ThePalestinian Cairo Declaration was a declaration signed on 19 March 2005 by twelve Palestinian factions, includingFatah,Hamas,Islamic Jihad,Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) andDemocratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP).[1] The Cairo Declaration affirmed the status of thePalestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people[1] through the participation in it of all forces and factions according to democratic principles. The Declaration implied a reform of the PLO by the inclusion in the PLO of Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
The signatories included Fatah, headed byMahmoud Abbas and Hamas, headed byKhalid Mash'al.[1]
A major point of disagreement between the large factions ofHamas andFatah (including the PLO) was – and still is – that Fatah has formally denounced armed resistance, whereas Hamas still promotes armed struggle against theIsraeli occupation.[2]
Yasser Arafat, thePresident of thePalestinian Authority, died on 11 November 2004. ThePalestinian presidential election to fill the position took place on 9 January 2005 in both the West Bank and Gaza, but were boycotted by both Hamas and Islamic Jihad.[3][4] The election resulted inPLO chairmanMahmoud Abbas being elected President to a four-year term.
On 16 February 2005, the Israeli parliament (theKnesset) approved theIsraeli disengagement from Gaza, which would have drastically changed Israeli–Palestinian relations in Gaza.
The Cairo Declaration, signed on 19 March 2005 at the end of a 3-days meeting inCairo, was an early conciliation attempt with the aim to unite the Palestinian factions against the Israeli occupation, restructure the PLO and avoid further violent interactions between the Palestinian groups.[5]
TheIsraeli withdrawal from Gaza was unilaterally completed by 12 September 2005.
The Declaration contains 6 points:[5]
ThePalestinian legislative election took place on 25 January 2006, and resulted in a Hamas victory. Hamas leaderIsmail Haniyeh formed anew PA government on 29 March 2006 comprising mostly Hamas members, afterFatah and other factions refused to join. Hamas continued not to recognize Israel and earlier agreements, leading to a substantial part of the international community, especially Israel, the United States and European countries, not to deal with the Hamas government and imposed sanctions. Following the abduction by Hamas militants ofGilad Shalit on 25 June 2006 in a cross-border raid via a tunnel out of Gaza, Israel detained nearly a quarter of PLC members and ministers on the West Bank during August 2006 and intensified the boycott of Gaza and other punitive measures.[6][7][8] ThePalestinian Prisoners' Document (also known as the Palestinian National Conciliation Document) dated 28 June 2006 urged the implementation of the Cairo Declaration.[9]
Calls for the implementation of the Cairo Declaration, the formation of a unity government and the cessation of violence between Fatah and Hamas were made in theFatah–Hamas Mecca Agreement of 8 February 2007. The Hamas government was replaced on 17 March 2007 by anational unity government headed by Haniyeh comprising Hamas and Fatah ministers.
In June 2007, after theHamas takeover of Gaza, when Hamas fighters took control of the Gaza Strip and removed all Fatah officials,[10] President Abbas, on 14 June, declared astate of emergency by Presidential decree, and dismissed Haniyeh's national unity government, and appointedan emergency government and suspended articles of the Basic Law, to circumvent the needed PNC approval.[11][12][13][14]
President Abbas threatened on 18 July 2007 to cancel the Cairo Declaration, which would have had the effect of expelling Hamas and Islamic Jihad from the PLO. The PFLP and the DFLP urged Abbas not to annul the Declaration.[1]