Los Angeles Times

Hamas shaken by Brotherhoo­d’s fall

The Palestinia­n spinoff faces the same woes that brought down its Egyptian mentor.

- By Edmund Sanders and Rushdi Abu Alouf edmund.sanders@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Abu Alouf reported from Gaza City.

CAIRO — As the sudden fall of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d reverberat­es through the Middle East, perhaps nowhere are events being watched more anxiously than in the Gaza Strip, the seaside enclave controlled by the Islamist group’s Palestinia­n spinoff, Hamas.

Seeing its Egyptian mentor swept from power after only one year has unnerved many leaders of Hamas, despite the group’s tight political and security control over Gaza.

Hamas leaders have said little publicly.

“The movement does not interfere in Egyptian affairs,” Hamas lawmaker Yehia Moussa said Thursday.

But the ousting Wednesday of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi was a stinging setback for the Gaza militant group, which lost its most powerful benefactor in a groundswel­l of public unrest.

Like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, Hamas has struggled to balance its Islamist and militant roots with the reality and responsibi­lity of governing. And like its Egyptian brethren, Hamas has been criticized for failing to deliver. Gaza’s 1.5 million residents remain locked in poverty and isolation, in part because Hamas is widely labeled a terrorist organizati­on and isolated by Israel and much of the West.

Already some Hamas rivals with the Palestinia­n secular faction Fatah are predicting that Gaza residents also will rise up. But Hamas spokesman Ihab Ghussein said the group is not worried, labeling talk of a revolt “ridiculous.”

Still, it’s an abrupt turn of events for Hamas. When Morsi ascended to power a year ago, Hamas leaders were almost giddy, confidentl­y predicting that the Brotherhoo­d’s rise would give them new leverage in confrontat­ions with Israel and Fatah, which is based in the West Bank. They expected that closer ties with a Muslim Brotherhoo­d-controlled Egypt would throw open the Rafah border crossing, end Gaza’s inter- national isolation and keep Israel’s military at bay.

Those hopes never fully materializ­ed, even though relations between Hamas and Egypt improved vastly compared with those seen under former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who viewed Hamas as an enemy

Morsi surprised many by continuing some of his predecesso­r’s border restrictio­ns on Gaza, particular­ly after militants linked to Gaza killed Egyptian security officers in the Sinai Peninsula in August and used the restive desert region as a launching pad to attack Israel.

Morsi’s alliance with Hamas didn’t prevent Israel from carrying out an eightday air offensive against Gaza in November, though his interventi­on may have helped head off a ground invasion. And despite Egyptian mediation efforts, a reconcilia­tion deal between Hamas and Fatah remains a distant dream.

Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d also helped protect Hamas from Egypt’s military, which always distrusted the Gaza group. With Morsi’s ousting, the military has reasserted itself as the dominant political force in Egypt.

“Hamas is the biggest loser,” said Mukhaimar Abu Saada, political science professor at Gaza City’s Al Azhar University. He said Hamas leaders are already concerned that Egypt’s interim government will impose tighter border controls and crack down on smuggling tunnels used to import fuel supplies.

“Don’t forget that the Egyptian opposition views Hamas as a party to the conf lict and accuses it of destabiliz­ing the Sinai,” Abu Saada said. “Hamas now fears that the continuing crisis in Egypt will lead to further actions against it.”

Others predict that Morsi’s downfall will further radicalize Hamas and sour the group on efforts to bring Western-style democracy to the region. Morsi supporters complain that he was swept away by military force despite being elected. Hamas likewise has fumed that its 2006 election victory was never accepted by the internatio­nal community, despite the West’s repeated calls for democratic reforms and nonviolenc­e.

Emboldened by Morsi’s rise, Hamas over the last year had attempted to impose stricter Islamic laws in Gaza, moving to segregate schools by gender, stop women from smoking or wearing low-cut jeans, and force young men into barbershop­s to change their Western-style haircuts.

Before he was replaced, Morsi was also criticized for spending too much time pursing a conservati­ve Islamist agenda that did nothing to alleviate economic problems and alienated much of Egypt’s secular and non-Muslim population — just the accusation­s that could eventually undermine Hamas’ rule in Gaza.

 ?? Ali Ali
European Pressphoto Agency ?? A HAMAS SECURITY guard patrols the Egyptian border in Rafah, Gaza Strip, this week. “Hamas is the biggest loser,” a political science professor in Gaza City said of the fall of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Egypt.
Ali Ali European Pressphoto Agency A HAMAS SECURITY guard patrols the Egyptian border in Rafah, Gaza Strip, this week. “Hamas is the biggest loser,” a political science professor in Gaza City said of the fall of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Egypt.

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