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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Palestinian PM forms cabinet, urges Gaza ceasefire

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas with Mohammed Mustafa, Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah. - Reuters File
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas with Mohammed Mustafa, Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah. - Reuters File
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RAMALLAH: Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Mustafa formed a new cabinet on Thursday in which he will also serve as foreign minister, making an immediate ceasefire and Israeli withdrawal from Gaza a top priority, Palestinian news agency WAFA reported.


Mustafa, an ally to President Mahmoud Abbas and a leading business figure, was appointed premier this month with a mandate to help reform the Palestinian Authority (PA), which exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.


He was also assigned to lead the relief and rebuilding of Gaza, which has been shattered by more than five months of war, while he performs double-duty as foreign minister, replacing Riyad al Maliki who had served in the position since 2009.


Abbas, who as president remains by far the most powerful figure in the PA, appointed the new government in a demonstration of willingness to meet international demands for change in the administration.


He approved Mustafa's cabinet with financial expert Omar al Bitar as finance minister, and Muhamad al Amour, who served as the president of the Palestinian Businessmen Association, as economy minister, but kept Ziad Hab al Reeh, former chief of the PA's internal intelligence agency, as interior minister, WAFA said.


The new cabinet will also include a state minister for "relief affairs".


Mustafa said in a cabinet statement addressed to Abbas that the first national priority is an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and a complete Israeli withdrawal from the enclave, in addition to allowing humanitarian aid to enter in large quantities and reaching all areas, WAFA reported.


"In order to enable the launch of the recovery process and preparation for reconstruction, stop the aggression and settlement activities, and curb settlers' terrorism in the West Bank," Mustafa added.


The PA, controlled by Abbas' Fatah political faction, has long had a strained relationship with Hamas, and the two factions fought a brief war before Fatah was expelled from the territory in 2007.


However it has repeatedly condemned the Israeli invasion of the Strip following the assault on Israel on October 7, and has insisted it must play a role in running Gaza after the war.


Meanwhile, Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday approved the new government presented by prime minister Mohammed Mustafa, who aims to see it play a role in post-war Gaza.


Mustafa said the "top national priority" for the new government, whose members are set to take office on Sunday, would be the end of the war in Gaza.


He added that his cabinet "will work on formulating visions to reunify the institutions, including assuming responsibility for Gaza".


In January, just over three months into the Israel-Hamas war, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Ramallah and urged "administrative reforms" to benefit Palestinians and potentially reunite the West Bank and Gaza under a single authority.


The new government is made up of 23 ministers, including three women and six Palestinians from Gaza, among them former Gaza City mayor Maged Abu Ramadan.


The fighting and destruction in the Gaza Strip -- which the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas took over from Abbas's government in 2007 -- has piled pressure on the Palestinian Authority.


In his first public appearance after his nomination, Mustafa talked of "transparency" and "zero tolerance" for corruption.


The PA has long been stained by divisions, corruption scandals, authoritarian tendencies and the apparent collapse of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.


Abbas's recent measures have so far done little to reassure diplomats eager to find an able and reliable Palestinian partner when the war ends. - AFP/dpa


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