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Hamas to unveil landmark ‘political document’ on 1st May

April 26, 2017 at 9:00 pm

Hamas plans to unveil a landmark “political document” next week in Qatar, the Gaza-based resistance movement announced Wednesday.

According to a Hamas statement, the group’s political chief, Khaled Meshaal, will convene a “special meeting” on 1st May “to officially unveil the new political document”.

It remains unclear whether the “political document” is meant to replace the group’s 1988 founding charter, in which Hamas asserts its longstanding refusal to recognise the state of Israel.

To be held in Qatari capital Doha, next Monday’s “special meeting” will be attended by writers, journalists and researchers, according to the statement.

Read: Hamas slams Abbas’ policy of intimidation

Leading Hamas member Ismail Radwan confirmed earlier that the group planned to unveil the new document “soon” after “settling on its final formula”.

Radwan declined to elaborate further, stating merely that the document would serve to “reaffirm the movement’s longstanding principles and its internal and external relations”.

One source close to Hamas, who spoke to Anadolu Agency on condition of anonymity due to the subject’s sensitivity, said the new document would reflect the movement’s “pragmatic vision”.

Hamas first began its resistance activities in 1987, when it established an armed wing dubbed the “Palestinian Mujahedeen”. In 1992, the group’s military wing was renamed the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades.

Read: Israeli minister warns new conflict with Hamas

Between 2008 and 2014, the Hamas-run Gaza Strip has been the target of three major Israeli military campaigns, the most recent of which was a 51-day onslaught in mid-2014 that left more than 2,250 Palestinians — mostly civilians — dead.

In 2006, one year before Israel imposed its crippling siege on the strip, Hamas won a majority in Palestinian legislative elections. The results of the polls, however, were never recognised by either Israel or the U.S.

Some Palestinian factions, including the Fatah movement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, refused to participate in the resultant Hamas-led government, accusing it of failing to produce a viable political program.