Third_Qurei_Government

Third Qurei Government

Third Qurei Government

Government of Palestine, from Feb 2005


The Palestinian Authority Government of February 2005 was a government of the Palestinian National Authority (PA) which existed from 24 February 2005 to March 2006. It was headed by Ahmed Qurei and composed of 24 ministers. The cabinet was dominated by technocrat professional appointees, nearly half of them with doctoral

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The Palestinian Authority Government of February 2005 was a government of the Palestinian National Authority (PA) which existed from 24 February 2005 to March 2006. It was headed by Ahmed Qurei and composed of 24 ministers. The cabinet was dominated by technocrat professional appointees, nearly half of them with doctoral degrees. A large part of the Government was Fatah affiliated. The Government was approved by the Palestinian Legislative Council by a 54-12 vote, with four abstentions. It was succeeded by the Hamas-led Government of March 2006.

Background

Pursuant to the Oslo Accords, the authority of the PA Government is limited to some civil rights of the Palestinians in the West Bank Areas A and B and in the Gaza Strip, and to internal security in Area A and in Gaza.

In January 2005, Mahmoud Abbas was elected the new President, following the death of Yasser Arafat. Abbas asked the incumbent Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei to continue in his post and form a new cabinet.

In March 2005, twelve Palestinian factions agreed on the Palestinian Cairo Declaration, which besides other things proposed that Hamas and Islamic Jihad join the Palestinian Liberation Organisation.

Formation

In February 2005, News Agency WAFA published a list of members of the new government to be presented in the Palestinian Legislative Council for a vote of confidence. Fatah legislators had agreed to vote in favor of the government on 21 February.[1] Due to repeated demands by Fatah officials and PLC members to make the new cabinet more reform-minded, however, the vote of confidence was repeatedly delayed.[2] It was finally passed on 24 February, after Qurei had revised the list of ministers to accommodate these demands.

The Government was approved in Parliament by a 54-12 vote, with four abstentions (at the time, the PLC had 88 seats).[3] It was headed again by Ahmed Qurei, and composed of 24 ministers. It was a technocrats cabinet dominated by professional appointees, nearly half of them with doctoral degrees. A large part of the Government was Fatah affiliated.[4]

Timeline

On 15 December 2005, Qurei briefly resigned his Prime Minister post to run for a seat in the Palestinian Parliament in the January 2006 elections, but returned to office nine days later after deciding not to run.

On 26 January 2006, Qurei announced his intention to resign following the Fatah party's defeat by Hamas in the parliamentary elections.[5] At the request of PNA President, Mahmoud Abbas, Qurei remained in office in a caretaker capacity until a successor was named.

Members of the Government

February 2005 to March 2006 [4]

Minister Office Party
1Ahmed QureiPrime MinisterFatah
2Nabil ShaathDeputy Prime Minister, InformationFatah
3Salam FayyadFinance *Independent
4Nasser YousefInterior and National Security [6] **Fatah
5Nasser al-KidwaForeign AffairsFatah
6Mohammed DahlanCivil AffairsFatah
7Mazan SunnoqrotEconomyIndependent
8Walid Abed RabbuAgricultureIndependent
9Naim Abu HummousEducation and Higher EducationFatah
10Thihni al-WaheidiHealthIndependent
11Mohammed IshtayehHousing and Public WorksFatah
12Farid JaladJusticeIndependent
13Hassan abu LibdehLabour, Social AffairsFatah
14Ghassan al-KhatibPlanningPPP
15Ziad BandakTourismIndependent
16Sayed al-Din KhurmaTransportIndependent
17Khalid al- QawasimiLocal Government
18Sufian Abu ZaidaPrisoner AffairsFatah
19Yusuf Jum'ah SalamahReligious AffairsIndependent
20Sabri SaydamTelecommunications, TechnologyIndependent
21Zahira KamalWomen’s AffairsFIDA
22Hind KhouryMinister without Portfolio
23Ahmed MajdalaniMinister without PortfolioPPSF
* Until November 2005, when Salam Fayyad resigned from the cabinet to run as leader of his new political party the Third Way[7]

** In April 2005, the responsibilities of Interior Minister were expanded with National Security forces and General Intelligence [8]


References


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