Updated Thursday, May 1, 2008 0:00 am TWN, By Aziz El-Kaissouni, Reuters Palestinian factions agree to truce with Israel: MENABut a number of factions were equivocal in their support for the truce, and some said they reserved the right to retaliate against Israeli attacks. “All the Palestinian factions have agreed to the Egyptian proposal on a truce with Israel,” MENA said, citing an unnamed high-level Egyptian official. The official said the proposal included a “comprehensive, reciprocal and simultaneous truce, implemented in a graduated framework starting in the Gaza Strip and then subsequently moving to the West Bank,” MENA added. MENA said the proposal was part of a broader plan eventually leading to the lifting of the blockade which Israel, with Egyptian help, has imposed on Gaza since last June. The plan includes attempts to reconcile the two biggest Palestinian factions — the Hamas Islamists who control the Gaza Strip and the Fatah group which controls the Palestinian Authority from its base in the West Bank. Egypt invited 12 Palestinian groups for talks to form a consensus on a proposal for a ceasefire that emerged from talks between Egypt and Hamas as part of efforts to end violence threatening talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Israel has been killing Hamas members in Gaza and the West Bank while Hamas and other groups have been firing crude rockets across the border into Israel. Each side says it is responding to attacks by the other. Talal Nagy of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, one of the groups attending the talks, said: “We are in favour of the truce, on the condition that it be balanced, reciprocal, equal and comprehensive, to include Gaza and the West Bank as well.” Ghazi Hussein of the small group Saiqa said his group supported the truce on similar terms, but that this did not mean they would “end the resistance to the Israeli occupation”. The group Islamic Jihad said on Tuesday it had approved a truce with Israel starting in the Gaza Strip, but reserved the right to respond to Israeli attacks in the West Bank. “Despite our reservations, we have given a chance to the Egyptian effort to lift the siege and end the aggression,” Abu Mujahed, a spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees said in Gaza. Senior Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine leader Rabah Mhana told Reuters his group would not be an obstacle to a Palestinian consensus, but that it believed a truce under occupation would be harmful. Hamas welcomed news of the agreement in Cairo and said Palestinian demands to lift the blockade and open border crossings must be met, adding that the agreement “kicks the ball into the Israeli court.” | Middle East Breaking News Most Read |