Hamas Urges Former Ally Hezbollah to Leave Syria


By MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank June 17, 2013 (AP)



http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/hamas-urges-ally-hezbollah-leave-syria-19420364

The Palestinian militant group Hamas on Monday urged Lebanon's Hezbollah
militia to withdraw its fighters from Syria and accused it of stoking
sectarian tensions, leveling unprecedented public criticism against a
former ally.

The Hamas statement came as the region's Sunni and Shiite Muslims are
lining up on opposite sides of Syria's civil war. Most of those trying
to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad are Sunnis, as are their
regional backers. Assad and key members of his regime are Alawites,
followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and he is being supported by
Shiite Iran, also the main backer of Hezbollah.

Last month, Hezbollah sharply raised its profile in the fighting in
Syria, playing a key role in the Assad regime's capture of the strategic
rebel-held town of Qusair. Many Sunni hard-liners have taken Hezbollah's
intervention as a declaration of war by Shiites, and some have urged
Sunnis to fight alongside the rebels.

Hamas, a Sunni movement, on Monday criticized Hezbollah over its growing
role in the Syria conflict. In a statement, Hamas called on Hezbollah to
"withdraw its forces from Syria and keep its weapons directed at the
Zionist enemy (Israel)." Hamas also said that sending forces to Syria
"contributed to the sectarian polarization in the region."


Hamas and Hezbollah used to be part of the self-proclaimed Iranian and
Syrian-led "axis of resistance" against Israel. Hamas leaders in exile
were based in Syria, and both Hamas and Hezbollah received funds and
weapons from Iran.

Hamas leaders left Syria last year to protest Assad's crackdown on
fellow Sunnis. Since then, Hamas has drifted away from Iran and moved
closer to the region's Sunni camp led by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, though
it has not formally cut ties with Tehran.

Hamas and Hezbollah played important roles in Iran's attempt to set up
heavily armed proxies on opposite sides of Israel - Hamas in the Gaza
Strip and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.

For years, Hamas and Hezbollah enjoyed close ties.

Two decades ago, when Israel deported hundreds of Islamic militants from
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to south Lebanon for a year, leaders of
Hamas had a chance to meet face-to-face with Hezbollah leaders. The
office of the Hamas representative in Lebanon is located in a heavily
guarded Hezbollah stronghold in southern Beirut. Hamas officials have
said Hezbollah has shared its military experience with their group.

Two Hamas officials in Gaza said Monday's statement is a result of
growing outrage within Hamas over Hezbollah's involvement in Syria. The
officials spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they did not want to
pre-empt the movement's top leaders who have been meeting in Cairo since
Sunday.

On Saturday, the Hamas representative in Lebanon, Ali Barakeh, met with
a member of the Hezbollah political bureau, Hassan Hubballah.

Hezbollah said in a statement that the two discussed "the existential
challenges facing the Muslim and Arab world today, particularly the war
on Syria," but it did not elaborate.

----

Associated Press writer Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed reporting






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