Hamas and President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction agreed on Friday to help revive Egyptian efforts to narrow a schism between the two groups that has undermined the Palestinian cause. “An agreement was reached for a course and steps to be taken toward reconciliation,” said a joint declaration issued after a late night meeting between Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal and Fatah official Azzam Al-Ahmed in the Syrian capital. The statement, read by Meshaal's deputy Mussa Abu Marzouk, said several sticking points have been already solved. The meeting came as face to face talks between the Palestinian Authority and Israel, which Hamas opposes, were renewed this month in Washington. Hamas politburo member Izzat Al-Rishq, said the two sides will meet again in Damascus next month to try to solve differences over an Egyptian “reconciliation paper”. “This was a positive meeting,” Rishq told reporters. Hamas had previously rejected the document and refused to go sign it in Cairo because the group considered it biased toward Fatah and could result in Fatah maintaining control over the official Palestinian security apparatus. Rishq lives in exile in Syria, along with Meshaal and other high-level members of Hamas. Syria has called for a US role to resume its own talks with Israel but Washington has made it clear that it wants Damascus to use its influence with Hamas in support the talks between Western