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Assembly President Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, openly leftist and pro-Palestinian, argued that the assembly
-- whose resolutions, unlike those of the Security Council, are non-binding
-- had a duty to make its voice heard because the Security Council's urgent call for a cease-fire a week ago had been "totally ignored" by Israel and Hamas. More than 60 nations signed up to speak Friday. Before Mashaal's comments, Salah Bardawil, a Hamas negotiator in Cairo, said his group demands Israeli troops withdraw within five days of the start of a cease-fire and seeks Turkish or European monitors to ensure that border crossings remain open. The comments appeared to reflect signs of cracks within Hamas, between its Gaza-based officials like Bardawil and Hamad, and the Damascus-based leadership-in-exile. In Tehran, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the fighting in Gaza has been "a great lesson for all," saying it shows "the absolute defeat and desperation of this (Israeli) regime." He says that "even for the supporters of the occupying regime and its leaders, it has become clear that the continuation of the Zionist regime's life in the region is not feasible." Israel says it launched the offensive Dec. 27 to stop rocket fire against southern Israeli towns by Hamas, which has controlled the Gaza Strip since 2007. Meanwhile, an emergency summit of the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries, called by Saudi Arabia to discuss Gaza, was held in Riyadh on Thursday evening. Arab foreign ministers were to meet Friday in Kuwait and were expected to make aid pledges for Gaza.
[Associated
Press;
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