Hamas political leader Khaled Mashaal arrived in Moscow for a 3-day
visit to Russia yesterday.
Russian officials urged the Palestinian group Hamas on Friday to renounce
violence, recognize Israel's right to exist and observe previous deals with the
Jewish state in high-profile talks with the group's leaders in Moscow.
Russia conveyed to Hamas the position of the Middle East mediating quartet in
the talks, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told journalists after his meeting
with the Hamas delegation, which arrived in Moscow early Friday for a three-day
visit.
"That deals primarily with the need to adhere to all existing agreements, the
need to recognize Israel as a state and a partner in the negotiations, the need
to give up military means to settle political issues," Lavrov said, quoted by
Russian news agencies.
Russia is a member of the quartet, which also includes the United Nations,
the United States and the European Union.
Hamas swept the January Palestinian parliamentary elections and is in the
process of forming a government. The group, sworn to Israel's destruction, has
been under mounting pressure to renounce violence, recognize Israel and accept
previous agreements with the Jewish state including the internationally-backed
roadmap peace plan.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Hamas political leader
Khaled Mashaal, who leads the Hamas delegation to Moscow, "confirmed Hamas'
readiness not to withdraw from the inter-Palestinian cease-fire agreement
concluded in March 2005 on the understanding that Israel also refrains from the
use of force."
But the Hamas leader also set out conditions for long-term peace with Israel.
Mashaal told a press conference that the movement "will take steps toward peace"
if Israel formally declares its readiness to return to the borders before the
1967 Mideast War, allow Palestinian refugees to return, pull down the dividing
wall and release all arrested Palestinians.