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First and Second Hamdallah Governments

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(Redirected fromPalestinian government of 2013)
Palestinian governments

First and Second Hamdallah Governments
Date formed6 June 2013 (First)
19 September 2013 (Second)
Date dissolved19 September 2013 (First)
2 June 2014 (Second)
People and organisations
Head of stateMahmoud Abbas
Head of governmentRami Hamdallah
History
PredecessorSecond Fayyad Government
SuccessorThird Hamdallah Government
Coat of arms of Palestine
Officeholders whose status is disputed are shown initalics
Arab LeagueMember state of the Arab League
flagPalestine portal
Rami Hamdallah led the Palestinian government of 2013

ThePalestinian governments of 2013 were twoPalestinian governments established respectively on 6 June and 19 September 2013. They ruledde facto over theWest Bank only.

The Palestinian government of June 2013 was led byRami Hamdallah, appointed byPalestinian PresidentMahmoud Abbas by presidential decree on 6 June 2013 inRamallah, the West Bank. The cabinet comprised 24 members, and was not presented for approval by thePalestinian Legislative Council. Two weeks later, Hamdallah resigned in protest at the appointment of two deputy prime ministers for political and economic affairs. Hamdallah later backtracked from his resignation and on 19 September 2013, the cabinet was sworn in for the second time, without any changes.

The Hamdallah government succeeded the successive governments ofSalam Fayyad, who had resigned as a consequence of the2011–2012 anti-corruption protests.

Timeline

[edit]

On 14 February 2013, amid pan-Arab calls for reform, Prime Minister Fayyad submitted to President Abbas his resignation along with that of his cabinet.[1] After consultations with other factions, institutions, and civil society groups, Abbas asked Fayyad to form a new government.[2] The reshuffle had long been demanded by Fayyad as well as members of Abbas'sFatah faction.[2]

On 6 June 2013, President Mahmud Abbas appointedRami Hamdallah Prime Minister, but was not presented for approval by thePalestinian Legislative Council.

Two weeks later, Hamdallah resigned in protest at the appointment of two deputy prime ministers for political and economic affairs.[3] According toHassan Khraisheh [ar], deputy speaker of thePLC, the real reason Hamdallah resigned was because he discovered the Prime Minister has no power and that there was no point in having a prime minister “at a time when President Abbas has a monopoly over all the executive branch’s authorities.” “The presence of two deputy prime ministers, who are friends of President Abbas, means that the prime minister is a powerless figure,”[4] Hamdallah's June appointment was originally envisioned as an interim measure until a unity government with Hamas could be formed.

On 23 June 2013, Abbas accepted Hamdallah's resignation, but asked him to stay on on a caretaker basis until a new premier could be appointed.[3]

On 19 September 2013, Hamdallah withdrew his resignation and the government was sworn in for the second time, without any changes.[5]

In June 2014, the government was replaced by aFatah-Hamas unity government, with Hamdallah as prime minister.

Members of the Government

[edit]

June 2013 to June 2014[6][7][8]

MinisterOfficeParty
1Rami HamdallahPrime MinisterFatah
2Ziad Abu AmrDeputy Prime Minister for Political Affairs[5]
3Muhammad MustafaDeputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs[5]
4Riyad al-Malki[9]Foreign Affairs Minister
5Said Abu AliInterior MinisterFatah
6Shukri BisharaFinance Minister
7Ali MuhannaJustice
8Ahmad MajdalaniLabor
9Ali Abu ZuhriEducation Minister
10Kamal al-SharafiSocial Affairs
11Mahmoud al-HabashWaqf and Religious Affairs
12Rabiha DiabWomen's Affairs
13Issa QaraqePrisoners Affairs
14Maher GhneimPublic works and Housing
15Adnan al-HusseiniJerusalem Affairs
16Jawad HarazallahNational Economy
17Rula Maa'yaaTourism and Antiquities
18Safaa’ Nasser EddinTelecommunications and Information Technology
19Walid AssafAgriculture
20Jawad AwwadHealth
21Sa’ed al-KawniLocal Government
22Nabil DmeidiTransportation
23Muhammad Abu RamadanState for Planning affairs
24Hussein al-SheikhCivil Affairs[10]Fatah
25Fawwaz AqelSecretary-General of the Cabinet (Rank of Minister)

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"Unrest in the Middle East and North Africa – country by country". CNN. 18 February 2011. Archived fromthe original on 17 February 2011.
  2. ^ab"Palestinian cabinet resigns". Al Jazeera English. 14 February 2011. Retrieved19 February 2011.
  3. ^abAbbas asks caretaker Palestinian PM to stay on. Agence France-Presse, 13 August 2013
  4. ^PA's Abbas accepts PM Hamdallah's resignation. Khaled Abu Toameh, Jerusalem Post, 23 June 2013
  5. ^abcAbbas swears in 16th Palestinian Authority government in Ramallah. Jerusalem Post, 19 September 2013
  6. ^Government of the State of Palestine, 6 June 2013. UN Observer SoP. Archived on 18 October 2013
  7. ^United Nations Development Programme—Programme of Assistance to the Palestinian People. Archived on 17 September 2015
  8. ^15th government of Palestinian Authority sworn in. Khaled Abu Toameh, Jerusalem Post, 6 June 2013
  9. ^Kuwait News. KUNA, 17 November 2013
  10. ^Israel agrees to return stolen organs of dead Palestinians. Al Arabiya, 14 November 2013
Divided
Gaza Strip
West Bank
Unity1
1On-and-offreconciliation betweenFatah andHamas since 2006
2Unity governments that fell apart, then only governed West Bank
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