The Jerusalem Post

Seeking to secure Sinai peninsula, Cairo builds closer ties with Hamas

Egypt eases access restrictio­ns • Terrorists to deter jihadists from crossing border

- • By LIN NOUEIHED and NIDAL AL-MUGHRABI (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)

CAIRO/GAZA (Reuters) – After years of strained relations, Egypt is moving closer to Hamas in Gaza, offering concession­s on trade and free movement in return for moves to secure the border against Islamic State fighters who have killed hundreds of Egyptian policemen and soldiers in northern Sinai.

Egypt has been at odds with Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, since a crackdown by Cairo on the armed group’s Islamist allies. Egypt closed the border, opening it only rarely.

But in recent weeks Egypt has eased restrictio­ns, allowing in trucks laden with food and other supplies and providing relief from an Israeli blockade that has restricted the flow of goods into the coastal territory.

The relaxation follows high-level Hamas visits to Cairo, which wants to restore its role as a regional power broker and crush Islamic State followers in the Sinai Peninsula, a strategic area of Egypt bordering Gaza, Israel and the Suez Canal.

It builds on what Egyptian and Palestinia­n sources say are efforts by Hamas to prevent the movement of insurgents in and out of Sinai, where they have killed hundreds of Egyptian soldiers and police since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi overthrew the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in 2013.

Egyptian and Palestinia­n officials say the changes could signal a new era of closer cooperatio­n after years of tension.

“We want cooperatio­n in controllin­g the borders and tunnels, the handover of perpetrato­rs of armed attacks and a boycott of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. They want the crossing to be opened and more trade,” one senior Egyptian security source said. “This has actually begun, but in a partial way. We hope it will continue.”

While it doesn’t engage directly with Hamas, Israel is working with Egypt on border security and monitoring of Gaza. Military officials have voiced support for any steps that bring greater stability to northern Sinai and Gaza.

Hamas has increased security along its side of the border with Sinai over the past year, deploying hundreds of security forces and erecting more watchtower­s. The group has also moved to round up Salafi Jihadists, who oppose an Egyptian-brokered 2014 cease-fire with Israel.

Hamas has not said how many it has captured and refuses to call them jihadists.

Egypt has given Hamas a list of about 85 fugitives, who it says are implicated in attacks and wants extradited, the Egyptian security source said. Hamas denied links with some of them and sources in the group said extraditio­ns were unlikely though it might make its own inquiries.

Hamas has, however, let Egypt know that it has no interest in stoking unrest in an Arab neighbor that has mediated several truces with Israel and among rival Palestinia­n factions.

“If we compare it with a year ago, the situation or the relationsh­ip is better, but it is not yet what is needed,” Mahmoud al-Zahar, a senior Hamas official, told Reuters. “The needs of our people are great, their need to travel, pursue education or treatment, attend to their businesses and families abroad and also the need for open trade with Egypt.”

The blossoming ties have been advanced by intense diplomacy, culminatin­g last month in a visit by Ismail Haniyeh, a deputy leader of Hamas, to meet Egyptian intelligen­ce officials.

A series of conference­s on Palestinia­n affairs have also taken place in Egypt in recent months attended by figures from Palestinia­n factions.

Organizers said the conference­s were part of efforts to restore Egypt’s regional role following the chaos of the 2011 Arab Spring revolts.

“The situation now is returning to normal,” said Elazb al-Tayeb Taher, a writer on Arab affairs at the state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper, which hosted one of the conference­s in November. “Egyptian intelligen­ce is restoring its relationsh­ip with Hamas in accordance with certain guidelines, chief among them being that Hamas does not become a major gateway for threats from Gaza targeting Egypt’s national security.”

Despite mutual distrust, Hamas and Egypt kept communicat­ion channels open, with Hamas officials regularly invited to Egypt.

But ties hit a low in 2013, after Sisi overthrew president Mohamed Morsi, banned the Muslim Brotherhoo­d as a terrorist organizati­on and jailed many of its supporters.

The desire to secure the area and restore a semblance of normality is as strong for Egypt, which wants to lure back foreign investors who fled after 2011, as it is for Gazans.

Egyptians who organized the Palestinia­n conference­s suggested the border might be reopened to trade for 10 or 15 days at a time – rather than a few days every six weeks at present – to build trust.

But the ultimate aim is more ambitious; a free trade area and an industrial zone on the Egyptian side to facilitate commerce, allow Gazans to travel abroad and create jobs for those who might otherwise join the insurgents.

“We’ve gotten to a point now with Hamas where we’re working on a framework on which to build for the coming period, and this will be contingent upon controllin­g the borders and the crossing will be open routinely,” said Tareq Fahmy, of the state-linked National Center for Middle East Studies, which co-organized two Palestinia­n conference­s last year. “We’re thinking of direct trade and all this is pivotal for our brothers in Hamas and the Gaza Strip, but... trust-building processes don’t take place overnight.”

For residents of northern Sinai, who face a gamut of checkpoint­s each day, open trade seems an outlandish notion. The conflict has rendered the area a wasteland of demolished houses, sand berms and trenches.

“It’s early to talk of trade. We are still living in a security zone,” said one resident.

 ??  ?? PALESTINIA­NS STAND behind a fence as they wait for the arrival of their relatives at Rafah crossing after it was opened by Egyptian authoritie­s over the weekend.
PALESTINIA­NS STAND behind a fence as they wait for the arrival of their relatives at Rafah crossing after it was opened by Egyptian authoritie­s over the weekend.

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