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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
World
Joshua Mitnick and Rushdi Abualouf

Hamas selects a new political chief

TEL AVIV, Israel _Hamas, the Palestinian group that controls the Gaza Strip, said Saturday that it chose Ismail Haniyeh, a charismatic politician, as its new political chief, the latest move in an effort to refresh the militant Islamist group's leadership and manifesto.

Haniyeh, seen as a relative moderate with close ties to Hamas' military wing, will move from Gaza City to Hamas headquarters in Doha, Qatar, to take over from Khaled Meshaal, who has been responsible for the organization's foreign relations and financing for the last 12 years.

The announcement caps several months of voting among Hamas' far-flung members in Gaza, the West Bank, Israeli jails and abroad to select a replacement for Meshaal, who sought to step down.

A few days earlier, Hamas announced a revised charter that eased its position on Israel and distanced itself from Islamist groups in the region in what was seen as an attempt to reverse years of growing isolation in the region.

Hamas, classified as a terrorist group by the United States, the European Union and Israel, has been buffeted by upheavals across the Arab world, which resulted in bruised relations and reduced support from governments in Iran, Syria and Egypt.

While Haniyeh is expected to continue Meshaal's program of emphasizing improved relations with Arab countries in the Middle East and reaching out to Western countries, his ascent to the organization's top position is seen as rebalancing influence within Hamas toward its Gaza leadership and its Qassem Brigades military wing, and away from its foreign political bureau.

Haniyeh led Hamas to its 2006 victory in a Palestinian parliamentary election and was prime minister of the Palestinian Authority. He remained the organization's political leader in Gaza after its takeover of the territory a decade ago from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party, and through years of blockade and war with Israel.

Earlier this year, Hamas selected Sinwar Yahya, a hard-line military leader, to replace Haniyeh as the top leader in Gaza _ a move that many feared could help spark a new round of fighting with Israel.

Haniyeh, who was an assistant to Hamas' founding spiritual leader, Sheikh Amed Yassin, and whose home is in a Gaza City refugee camp, is consistently ranked by Palestinian opinion polls as one as the most popular politicians.

"Under its new leadership, the movement must continue and intensify its efforts to strengthen internal Palestinian relations ... strengthen the steadfastness of our people, and mobilize Arab, Islamic and international powers to stand by the Palestinian people," Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said in a statement announcing Haniyeh's selection.

Last week, Hamas announced additions to its charter that expressed support for establishing a provisional Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip _ seen as a tacit acceptance of Israel. The new manifesto emphasized that Hamas is first and foremost a Palestinian movement _ an effort to distance itself from Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and improve ties with the government in Cairo. It also sought to distance the organization from the anti-Semitic language of its original charter.

A statement from the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netahyahu rejected the revised charter as an effort to "fool the world.''

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(Abualouf, a special correspondent, reported from Gaza City, Gaza Strip.)

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