http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/04/02/hamas-islamists-re-elect-meshaal-as-leader/

Hamas Islamists re-elect Meshaal as leader 




GAZA: The Islamist Palestinian Hamas group re-elected the relatively pragmatic 
Khaled Meshaal as its leader yesterday, despite past criticism of him by 
hardliners in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. A diplomat in the region said Egypt 
and Qatar had lobbied strongly on behalf of a reluctant Meshaal before the vote 
in Cairo by about 60 Hamas leaders who had met through the night.

Born in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Meshaal, 56, has lived in exile for 
decades and, like his Hamas comrades, rejects Israel’s right to exist. But he 
played a vital role in indirect, Egyptian-mediated talks between Israel and 
Hamas to secure a truce that ended an eight-day Gaza war four months ago. And 
Meshaal drew criticism last year from Hamas’s Gaza-based leadership over what 
some officials saw as a personal initiative to heal a rift with Western-backed 
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose rival Fatah party lost control of 
the Israeli-blockaded enclave in a brief civil war in 2007.

In a terse statement, a Hamas official said only that Meshaal had been 
re-elected in the Cairo meeting. The diplomat in the region, who asked not to 
be identified, said Egypt’s Islamist leadership and the wealthy Gulf emirate of 
Qatar had backed Meshaal, who had earlier promised to step down. “They saw 
Meshaal as a moderate and an example of a leader who saw the world more 
comprehensively than other (Gaza-based) hardliners in the group,” said the 
diplomat.

Meshaal left Damascus, where Hamas had a headquarters, about a year ago after 
the Sunni Islamist militant movement broke with President Bashar Al-Assad over 
Syria’s civil war. In December, Meshaal travelled from Egypt to make his first 
visit to Gaza, where he told a rally he would never recognize Israel and 
pledged to “free the land of Palestine inch by inch”.

PARIAH
Once treated as a pariah by many US-allied Arab leaders, Hamas has seen its 
standing in the region rise on the back of Arab uprisings that have ushered in 
more sympathetic Islamist governments in Egypt and elsewhere. Israel, the 
United States and most Western governments view Hamas as a terrorist group for 
its refusal to recognize the Jewish state or to renounce violence that included 
suicide bombings in a Palestinian uprising a decade ago.

“I do not say Europe is going to open up to Hamas tomorrow,” said the diplomat, 
but added that a “real engagement with the West” was possible if Meshaal 
persuaded Islamist colleagues to change their policies. Palestinian political 
analyst Hani Al-Masri said Meshaal’s re-election signaled that Hamas was 
showing a desire for more moderation in order to build bridges with the West, 
but “it did not mean that Meshaal was a man who raises a white flag”.

Meshaal burnished his credentials within Hamas after surviving an Israeli 
assassination attempt in Jordan in 1997 and succeeded the group’s founder, 
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, in 2004 after Israel assassinated the wheelchair-bound 
cleric. Hamas, which has close links to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, was founded 
in 1988 soon after Palestinians launched an uprising against Israel. Yassin was 
killed during a second revolt. Despite falling out with Syria, Meshaal has 
sought to maintain ties with Iran, an Assad ally which supplies weapons to 
Hamas, including rockets the group has fired at Israeli cities.

Israel has struck repeatedly at militants in Gaza, attacks that have sometimes 
caused heavy casualties among civilians in the impoverished, densely-populated 
coastal territory. Meshaal, who now divides his time between Cairo and Qatar, 
has tried to overcome his differences with Abbas, who supports a two-state 
solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. His re-election, said senior 
Fatah official Mahmoud Al-Aloul, “may boost chances of reconciliation (with 
Abbas), but that does not mean it would be done, given remaining disputes 
within Hamas”. – Reuters


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