2024 Beijing Declaration
The Beijing Declaration on Ending Division and Strengthening Palestinian National Unity, commonly known as the Beijing Declaration, is an agreement signed on 23 July 2024 by 14 different Palestinian factions, including Fatah and Hamas, as part of the reconciliation process between the two factions in a conflict that started in the aftermath of the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections and included the 2007 Hamas takeover of Gaza.
Background
Following the outbreak of the Israeli invasion on Gaza in October 2023, the Israeli military advanced into the Gaza Strip. Over the course of the war, a United Nations agency and international organisations including Amnesty International have found that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. This crisis prompted the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah and the Hamas leadership to try to reach a new agreement on a unity government with the goal of reaching a common plan of action for the eventual reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. Previous such agreements have never been fully implemented.Fatah and Hamas are currently the two largest of the Palestinian factions. Founded in 1959, Fatah is the leading member of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which is an umbrella organization consisting of several movements. It takes a moderate stance on the conflict with Israel, favoring a two-state solution where the Palestinian state would be built on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital.
Hamas, on the other hand, is a Sunni Islamist movement founded in 1987, that advocates for one Palestinian state in the entire territory. However, in recent years Hamas has accepted a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza as a temporary solution to the conflict, supporting the pre-1967 borders in its 2017 charter.
Negotiations
The government of the People's Republic of China offered the Palestinian factions its offices to try to reach an agreement, and in July 2024, representatives of 14 Palestinian organizations met in Beijing, China. On July 23, they concluded a new agreement on unity government.The most prominent highlight in the deal is a plan to form an interim national reconciliation government around the governance of Gaza after the war with Israel, as well as of the West Bank, Director of the Office of the Central Foreign Affairs Commission Wang Yi said. Wang further described the meeting as a "historic moment for the cause of Palestine’s liberation".
The negotiations were witnessed by envoys from Egypt, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Russia, and Turkey.
Agreement
According to the declaration, the factions agreed to achieve "a comprehensive Palestinian national unity that includes all Palestinian factions under the PLO framework, and to commit to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital with the help of Egypt, Algeria, China and Russia". They stated that this would take the form of a temporary national unity government. They further "agreed to deploy all efforts to lift the Israeli blockade on Gaza and ensure the unimpeded delivery of humanitarian aid into the enclave".The declaration also stressed the Palestinian people's right to resist the Israeli occupation in accordance with international law and the United Nations charter and to thwart any attempts to displace Palestinians from their land.
Reactions
Palestinian factions
- : The President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, welcomed the Beijing Declaration, stating that it is "completely consistent with the Palestinian position and international legitimacy" and appreciating "China's efforts to help the State of Palestine obtain its full membership of the United Nations and to hold an international peace conference to implement the two-state solution, a step conducive to ending the occupation and realize the establishment of the Palestinian state".
- : Musa Abu Marzouk, head of the International Relations Office of Hamas and one of the negotiators of the agreement, explained to the media that "We will strive to implement what we signed with Fatah. We hope that the Beijing Declaration will not be like previous agreements". Husam Badran, head of Hamas's national relations office, said that the agreement represented "the best and most suitable response to the Palestinian situation after the war, serving as a barricade against all regional and international interventions that seek to impose realities contrary to the interests of our people in managing Palestinian affairs".
- : The Palestinian Islamic Jihad rejected the version of the declaration's text circulating on the web as "inaccurate and mendacious", adding that it would refuse to sign "any agreement which, by including international resolutions, might lead to recognition of the usurping Zionist regime, which has developed plans to destroy the Palestinian cause".
- Palestinian National Initiative: Mustafa Barghouti, secretary-general of the Palestinian National Initiative, said that the declaration is more far-reaching than earlier agreements between the Palestinian factions. He stated that it is mainly important because it "blocks Israeli efforts to create some sort of collaborative structure against Palestinian interests".
- : The Deputy Secretary-General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Jamil Mazhar, considered the Beijing Declaration an advanced step towards Palestinian unity, stressing that it "constitutes a new phase, and it is necessary to build on it with practical and executive measure".
Other countries
- : In the aftermath of the declaration, Chinese diplomat and ambassador to Qatar Cao Xiaolin called it a "key step to resolve the Palestinian question", adding that "Palestinian unity is key to the realisation of Palestinian statehood and China is committed to facilitating it".
- : Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Abu Zeid tweeted that "Egypt hails all international and regional efforts that aim to reach a Palestinian national reconciliation, last of which were the appreciated efforts of friendly China." He added that "the unity of the Palestinian line in this critical moment of the nation's history is extremely significant for achieving the dream of an independent Palestinian state."
- : German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock voiced scepticism towards the declaration and called on Hamas to release all hostages and endorse the peace initiative proposed by the United States.
- : Minister of Foreign Affairs Israel Katz criticized Mahmoud Abbas, tweeting "Instead of rejecting terrorism, Mahmoud Abbas embraces the murderers and rapists of Hamas, revealing his true face".
- : Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said that "China's role in the Middle East peace process is commendable and important to achieving Palestinian solidarity". The uniting of various Palestinian factions under the Beijing Declaration is a crucial step toward realizing the rights of the Palestinian people, he said in a statement, adding he "commend the government of the People's Republic of China for facilitating talks".
- : The Foreign Ministry expressed Oman's welcome of the agreement. Its statement stressed "the importance of uniting the Palestinian ranks and empowering them by all political and diplomatic means to push for an end to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories and achieve justice by establishing an independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders".
- : Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif endorsed the declaration. He commended China's diplomatic efforts and expressed hope for enduring peace. Sharif reiterated Pakistan's support for the Palestinian cause and called for a two-state solution.
- : The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement on 25 July, described the agreement as "an important step towards unity and consolidating the national project to establish an independent Palestinian State on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital". The ministry also affirmed Qatari support "for all steps aimed at overcoming differences and ending division, as well as its aspiration for the sustainability of unity and partnership among the Palestinian brothers" and praised the role of China in the talks.
- : Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova expressed Russia's support for the agreement, emphasizing "the importance of Palestinian unity and the administrative and political integrity of the Palestinian territories within the 1967 borders as essential" for the Israeli–Palestinian peace process. She confirmed Russia's readiness "to continue to vigorously assist the Palestinians in this effort, including in close coordination with our Chinese colleagues and regional partners."
- : Turkey welcomed Palestinian political factions coming together in the Chinese capital Beijing, accepting declaration aimed at achieving national unity. “We welcome the gathering of Palestinian political factions in Beijing at the invitation of the Government of the People's Republic of China and their acceptance of a declaration aimed at achieving national unity,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. The statement also hailed China's contributions to the reconciliation process among different Palestinian factions. "In the current conditions, where Israel's attacks in Gaza persist with full force and incursions intensify in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the importance and urgency of achieving political unity in Palestine have escalated." The statement expressed Ankara's expectation on the implementation of the steps outlined in the declaration adopted in Beijing. Turkey expects the longstanding efforts aimed at achieving political unity in Palestine to yield positive results “as soon as possible,” the statement added.
- : Spokesperson for the United States Department of State Matthew Miller criticized the reconciliation agreement, stating that Hamas cannot play a part in Palestinian political life and citing the American designation of Hamas as a terrorist group.