
Longtime Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has dampened hopes for elections that are years overdue.
Presidential and parliamentary polls should be held within a year after the end of the Gaza war, Abbas said on Friday in Rome, according to the Palestinian news agency WAFA.
There is currently no end in sight to the Gaza war, despite the nominal ceasefire in place since October.
The Palestinian militia Hamas has not yet fulfilled all the points of the first phase of the Gaza peace plan. It remains to be seen whether the second phase can then be successfully implemented.
The focus is on particularly contentious issues such as the disarmament of Hamas.
Abbas, who won the 2005 presidential election in the autonomous territories, has remained in office without being re-elected, resulting in a sharp decline in his popularity.
At 90, he is one of the oldest leaders in the world, surpassed only by Cameroon's 92-year-old President Paul Biya.
The autonomous administration led by Abbas controls parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, but has no power against the Israeli military administration or the expansion of settlements.
In the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian organization Fatah lost control to Hamas in 2007 after a violent power struggle.
Figure out How to Use the Experience of a Fender bender Legal counselor for Your Potential benefit
Land Rover Just Unveiled Its Dakar Rally Defender
Instructions to Expand Your Advantages from an Open Record Reward
Virtual reality opens doors for older people to build closer connections in real life
What's your #1 tone
Explainer-What Novo Nordisk's weight-loss pill approval means for company, patients
Mom warns of Christmas gift hazard as daughter recovers in hospital
Kendall Jenner addresses long-standing rumor about her sexuality
Space Condos to Lift Your Metropolitan Living












