2006年VOA标准英语-Clashes Between Rival Palestinian Factions Test(在线收听) |
By Robert Berger Rival Palestinian factions have clashed again in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. At least one person was killed and six wounded. As Robert Berger reports from VOA's Jerusalem bureau, a breakdown of law and order in the Palestinian territories has exacerbated a political deadlock over early elections. The clashes tested a three-day old ceasefire aimed at averting a Palestinian civil war. Gun battles erupted a week ago, when Mr. Abbas declared early elections in a bid to topple the Hamas-led government. Hamas described the move as a coup d'état. Israeli analyst Mordechai Nissan says Hamas and Fatah have been on a collision course since the death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat two years ago. "They're engaged in their own infighting which they're unable to stop. And they're unable to stop it, it seems, because basically once Arafat left the scene, when he died, they've been unable to unite around a leader who they all accept. Mahmoud Abbas is not of the stature of Arafat," he said. Nissan says there is also a major difference in ideology. "And therefore, the endemic conflict between Hamas, being Islamic, and Fatah, being more national, has broken out quite expectedly," he said. Leaders of both sides have appealed for calm. But the political impasse over early elections remains with no solution in sight. And that is fertile ground for more violence. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/12/36261.html |