The Phnom Penh Post

Change of leadership for Hamas

- Sakher Abou El Oun

PALESTINIA­N Islamist movement Hamas elected ex-Gaza Strip Chief Ismail Haniya as its new leader on Saturday, days after revising its founding charter to ease its stance on Israel.

Haniya, seen as a pragmatist within the movement, is expected to remain in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n enclave run by Hamas since 2007.

His predecesso­r Khaled Meshaal lives in exile in Doha and had completed the maximum two terms in office.

“The Hamas Shura Council on Saturday elected Ismail Haniya as head of the movement’s political bureau,” the group’s official website announced.

He beat Mussa Abu Marzuk and Mohamed Nazzal in a videoconfe­rence vote of the ruling council’s members in Gaza, the West Bank and outside the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The 54-year-old with a salt-and-pepper beard takes charge of Hamas as it seeks to ease its internatio­nal isolation while not marginalis­ing hardliners within the movement.

Last Monday, it unveiled a new policy document easing its stance on Israel after having long called for its destructio­n.

The document notably accepts the creation of a Palestinia­n state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza, the territorie­s occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967.

It also says its struggle is not against Jews because of their religion but against Israel as an occupier.

Internatio­nal isolation

The original 1988 charter will not be dropped, just supplement­ed, in a move some analysts see as a way of maintainin­g the backing of hardliners.

“The new charter and Haniya’s election are two of the biggest events in recent years,” a European official based in Jerusalem said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The question is how is Hamas going to build on this momentum.”

Hamas’s Gaza spokesman Fawzi Barhum said the leadership transition would be smooth.

“Meshaal had already set in motion a new phase,” he said. “Haniya will continue on this path.”

Leila Seurat, a researcher at the Parisbased Centre for Internatio­nal Studies and Research, said the election of a Gaza-based leader signalled a shift for the movement. It had been directed from Doha and from Damascus since Israel assassinat­ed the movement’s founding father Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in 2004.

“His election is a sign that the Gaza leadership has regained the upper hand from those outside,” she said.

Hamas is branded a terrorist group by Israel, the United States and the European Union, and the new document is aimed in part at easing its internatio­nal isolation. Hamas officials said the revised document in no way amounts to recognitio­n of Israel as demanded by the internatio­nal community.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s spokesman has dismissed the revision, accusing Hamas of “attempting to fool the world”.

In February, the movement elected a hardline member of its armed wing as its new Gaza head to replace Haniya in that post. Yahya Sinwar was jailed by Israel until October 2011, when he was freed along with over 1,000 other Palestinia­n prisoners in exchange for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier captured five years earlier.

An influentia­l military figure, he represents for some the hardest line within the Islamist movement.

Israel has fought three wars with Hamas since 2008, and maintains a crippling blockade on Gaza.

The Israeli army appeared on Saturday to be urging Haniya not to seek a new confrontat­ion.

“#Hamas elected a new leader. Time for promise & hope?” Israeli army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Peter Lerner posted on his official Twitter site. “I hope [Haniya] makes good decisions for the Palestinia­ns he aspires to lead.”

The Gaza-based Islamic Jihad group on Saturday slammed the Hamas policy tweak.

“As partners with our Hamas brothers in the struggle for liberation, we feel concern over the document,” said Islamic Jihad’s deputy leader, Ziad al-Nakhala.

“We are opposed to Hamas’s acceptance of a state within the 1967 borders and we think this is a concession which damages our aims,” he said on Islamic Jihad’s website.

Nakhala said the new Hamas policy formally accepting the idea of a state in the territorie­s occupied by Israel in 1967 would “lead to deadlock and can only produce half-solutions”.

Founded in the wake of the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran, a close ally, Islamic Jihad is the second force in the Gaza Strip and focused entirely on the armed struggle.

 ?? MOHAMMED ABED/AFP ?? Ismail Haniya was elected as the new head of Hamas days after the movement eased its stance on Israel by revising its charter.
MOHAMMED ABED/AFP Ismail Haniya was elected as the new head of Hamas days after the movement eased its stance on Israel by revising its charter.

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