Abbas warns Hamas he can remove government   (AP)  Updated: 2006-04-24 21:29  
A spokesman for the Hamas-led government, Ghazi Hamad, added that Abbas 
should not have made such a statement at an early point in the tenure of the new 
government. 
 "We expect from President Abbas to protect his government and not to make 
such declarations," Hamad said in an interview from Gaza city. 
 Aides to Abbas said his comments were meant as a warning to Khaled Mashaal, 
the Hamas leader who criticized the Palestinian president last week, and that 
Abbas doesn't plan on dissolving the government anytime soon. He will do so only 
if the economic situation in the territories becomes "catastrophic," they said. 
 If Abbas were to dissolve the government, he would ask someone else to try to 
form a new Cabinet, which would need the approval of the Hamas-controled 
legislature. If a stalemate then emerged, Abbas has the authority to order new 
elections. 
 In the interview, Abbas also said that Hamas had to face the facts and 
negotiate with Israel or the Palestinian people would be left to starve after 
the United States and European Union cut funding because of Hamas' refusal to 
recognize Israel or renounce violence. 
 "Hamas has to face the facts and establish communication with Israel," he 
said. "I'm worried that the situation will turn into a tragedy in the near 
future. A short time later, we could be up against a great hunger disaster in 
Palestine." 
 "Without help we can't stand on our feet long," he added. Abbas spoke during 
the interview in both Arabic and English and the interview was broadcast with a 
voice-over in Turkish. CNN-Turk provided The Associated Press with a full 
transcript of Abbas' remarks translated into Turkish. 
    
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