The return of the independent Al-Quds daily generated excitement in Gaza City, and all 1,500 copies that were delivered today quickly sold out.
"Al-Quds is back!" shouted Nabil Baker, a 42-year-old newspaper vendor, as he drove his bike through the streets, selling copies.
While devoted readers have followed Al-Quds online, he said there was something different about reading and touching the hard copy. "The readers like Al-Quds more than any other paper. They are yearning to read it again," he said.
After repeated attempts at reconciliation, the rival governments signed a unity pact last month calling for the two sides to form a unity government in June, and then hold new elections around year's end.
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Although the split weakened Abbas' position in peace talks, Israel has also objected at his recent attempts to reconcile. Israel considers Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis over the past two decades, a terrorist group and says it will not negotiate with any Palestinian government that includes the Islamic group. The latest round of US -brokered peace talks collapsed last month.
Hamas' agreed to permit the distribution of Al-Quds was the latest in a series of small gestures by the sides toward implementing their deal.
Hamas banned Al-Quds, which is published in Jerusalem but is the West Bank's most widely circulated newspaper, in 2008 after it printed a claim that Hamas was behind a deadly Gaza explosion. Other West Bank newspapers are also banned.