Hamas & Fatah celebrates , Hamas Chief, Khaled Mashaal, arrival In Gaza after 45 Years, shows signs of Unity & Victory


Palestinian Celebrate Hamas Leader Khalid Mishaal with Ismail HaniyahJNN 08 Dec 2012 RAFAH, Gaza Strip — The political leader of Hamas resistance movement, Khaled Meshaal, has arrived in the Gaza Strip for his first-ever visit to the Palestinian territory and to take part in Palestinians’ victory rally . The image of Hamas’ long-exiled chief triumphantly walking around the Gaza Strip, flashing victory signs beside Islamic militant leaders Friday, illustrates how the group’s defiance of Israel is forcing a change in Palestinian politics.Buoyed by the rise of fellow Islamists in Egypt, Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal and his allies are confronting Israel with the specter of a change in the balance of power between the two rival Palestinian factions – Hamas and the Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah.

Mashaal, 56, who left the West Bank as a child and now leads Hamas from the Gulf state of Qatar, broke into tears Friday as he arrived in the Gaza Strip for his first-ever visit.

Once on Gazan soil after crossing the Rafah border from Egypt on Friday , he prostrated himself in a gesture of thanks, He then recited a traditional Islamic prayer and kissed the ground. describing his first visit to Gaza as a “third birth” and expressing his wish to become “a martyr” in the Palestinian territory.

Meshaal was greeted by the democratically-elected Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniya, who described the leader’s visit as “a historic event”.

Thousands of supporters lined the streets as Mashaal and Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh drove by, waving and flashing victory signs.

“I consider this moment my third birth, and I pray to God that my fourth birth will be the moment when all of Palestine is liberated,” said Meshaal, who is from a village in the West Bank but went into exile with his family after the 1967 Middle East war, only to return for a brief visit in 1975.

Meshaal said his previous two “births” were the day he survived an assassination attempt by Israel in Jordan in 1997, and his actual birth in 1956.

Mashaal’s visit would have been unthinkable just a few weeks ago. He would have been an easy target for Israel. Fifteen years ago, Mashaal was nearly assassinated in Jordan by Israeli agents who squirted a deadly poison in his ear, narrowly escaping after the U.S. forced Benjamin Netanyahu, then serving his first term as Israel’s prime minister, to provide the antidote.

On Friday, Mashaal referred to the assassination attempt by “the foolish Netanyahu,” saying, “God was stronger than him and his conspiracy.”

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said in a statement that Meshaal’s visit was “a fruit of the victory of the resistance over the occupation.”

Meshaal is expected to spend two days in the besieged Palestinian enclave and attend a mass rally in Gaza City on Saturday, organized to celebrate both Hamas’ recent victory over Israel and the 25th anniversary of the founding of Hamas.

But a Nov. 21 cease-fire agreement, negotiated by Egypt, has forced Israel to leave Hamas leaders alone and negotiate, albeit indirectly, with the Islamic militant group sworn to its destruction.

He is scheduled to meet with members of different Palestinian movements and Gaza residents as well as the families of those killed in the latest Israeli aggression. Meshaal will also address Palestinians about Hamas’ future strategy vis-a-vis Israel.

It appears unlikely that Hamas would ever agree to sit down for peace talks with Israel. The U.S. and European Union have joined Israel in listing Hamas as a terror organization

But with Israel’s relations at an all-time low with Abbas, the Jewish state might be faced with a tough choice.

Peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, frozen since 2008, seem to have collapsed altogether. Abbas’s recent success at the U.N., where he won recognition of a de facto state, angered the Israeli government, which insists Palestinian statehood should be reached through a peace agreement and talks.

Mashaal’s visit came just two weeks ago after the bloodiest round of Israel-Gaza violence in four years.

Hamas perceives it came out on top in the fighting because it managed to hold its own despite heavy Israeli airstrikes. It succeeded in maintaining an almost constant barrage of rocket attacks on Israeli cities, with some exploding in the Jewish heartland for the first time near Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Millions of Israelis were in range of the Palestinian attacks.

Eight days of fighting ended with an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire that stipulated Israel would stop targeting militants. That, along with unprecedented support from Egypt, allowed Mashaal to make the visit without fear.

As a result of that truce, Israel, which officially shuns Hamas as a terrorist group, is now conducting indirect talks with Hamas through Egypt.

In a sign of how touchy Israel is on the issue, Danny Danon, a lawmaker from Netanyahu’s Likud party, denied that indirect talks were taking place.

Hamas has received a boost from the rise of its parent movement, the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, following Arab Spring revolts – especially in Egypt.

Deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak barely tolerated Hamas. He cooperated with Israel on a blockade of Gaza after 2007, when Hamas seized control of the territory in bloody street battles from Abbas’ Fatah faction.

Since then Palestinians have been split, with Hamas ruling Gaza and Fatah ruling parts of the West Bank.

Israel, which is reluctantly coming to terms with the recent shifting Palestinian power balance, mostly kept silent on Mashaal’s 48-hour visit to Gaza. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said Israel did not differentiate among various Hamas leaders. “Hamas is Hamas is Hamas,” said the spokesman, Yigal Palmor.

Thousands of masked Hamas militants deployed throughout Gaza to protect Mashaal’s convoy, with rocket-propelled grenades, assault rifles and anti-aircraft weaponry in tow.

During Friday’s visit, which was timed for the 25th anniversary of Hamas’ founding, Mashaal also paid homage at the house of the group’s spiritual leader Ahmed Yassin, who was paralyzed in a childhood accident and killed by a missile fired from an Israeli helicopter on March 22, 2004.

The assassination came at a time of heavy Israeli-Palestinian fighting, with Israeli military operations against Palestinians militants and a wave of Hamas suicide bombings in Israel.

“The resistance was launched from this humble house, Yassin the giant of Jihad operated from here. We pledge to continue his path,” Mashaal said.

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