maandag 1 september 2008

Nieuwe Hamas Shura Council bemoeilijkt onderhandelingen over Schalit

 
Hamas neemt al een bepaald onflexibel standpunt in wat betreft een gevangenenruil met Israel, en de hardliners in Hamas, met name de in Syrie gevestigde leider Meshaal, hadden al een beslissende stem, en bovendien, ook de 'gematigde' Hamas activisten verheerlijken geweld tegen Israel, een land waar op zijn best tijdelijke bestanden mee zijn te sluiten totdat men sterk genoeg is het te verslaan.
 
Met de nieuwe adviserende raad van Hamas wordt het allemaal wellicht nog erger. Hamas heeft zijn eisen voor de vrijlating van Shalit nogmaals opgeschroefd.
 
Het valt te hopen dat Israel inziet dat de vrijlating van Shalit niet het allerhoogste strategische belang is, en men vooral goed voorbereid moet zijn op een nieuwe confrontatie. En hopelijk ziet het Westen eindelijk dat met Hamas niet over vrede valt te onderhandelen.
 
RP
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Hamas 'thugs' may foil Schalit release

Aug. 29, 2008
Khaled Abu Toameh , THE JERUSALEM POST

 

The results of a recent election held for one of Hamas's key decision-making bodies are likely to hinder efforts to free kidnapped IDF soldier St.-Sgt Gilad Schalit, sources in the Gaza Strip told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.

The secret ballot was held about 10 days ago for the Shura (Consultative) Council, which is made up of Hamas's senior political and religious leadership and is tasked with discussing all important issues.

The names of the Shura Council members are kept secret, although it is believed that some of them are based in a number of Arab countries.

The sources told the Post the vote resulted in a major victory for representatives of the "young guard" in Hamas, most of whom are affiliated with the movement's armed wing, Izzadin Kassam.

The sources described the victory as a "coup," pointing out that the newly-elected members were far more radical than those who were ousted from the council.

"The Shura Council of Hamas is now dominated by warlords, thugs and militiamen," one source said. "The new members are not as educated as their predecessors.

Another source described the vote as a "turning point" in the history of the Islamist organization. "From now on, the armed wing of Hamas is expected to play a bigger role in the decision-making process, he said. "The political leadership of Hamas has definitely been weakened."

Given the fact that Schalit is being held by members of Izzadin Kassam, some of whom are now represented in the Shura Council, Hamas is unlikely to soften its position in the talks on a prisoner exchange agreement.

A Palestinian academic closely associated with Hamas told the Post he expected the new council members to endorse a tougher approach in the negotiations over the release of Schalit.

"The new members are less patient and less experienced," he said. "These are the guys who carry the guns and control the situation on the ground."

He said that one of Hamas's representatives in the negotiations over a prisoner release, Jamal Abu Hashem, lost his seat in the council election. Abu Hashem, he said, was a veteran Hamas official who had been carrying out political missions on behalf of the movement for many years.

Two other veteran Hamas politicians, Ghazi Hamad and Ahmed Youssef, did not even bother to run in the election because they knew they stood no chance against the young guard representatives.

Those elected to the council include Issa al-Nashar, Majdi al-Baba, Fuad al-Nahal, Atallah Abu al-Sabah, Yousef Farhat, Salem Salameh, Abu Ayman Taha and Osama Hammad. Almost all of them are described by sources in the Gaza Strip as warlords and militiamen belonging to Izzadin Kassam.

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