Hamas
leader gets invite to summit in Iran
Iran
has invited a leader of the Islamist group Hamas to attend a summit
of 120 developing nations, officials said on Friday, a move that
could antagonize Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and anger
Western powers who consider Hamas a terrorist group.
24
August, 2012
Iran
hopes to earn diplomatic kudos by hosting a summit of the Non-Aligned
Movement from August 29-31 at a time when the West is seeking to
cripple its economy and isolate it diplomatically over its disputed
nuclear program.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has already said he will attend,
defying calls from the United States and Israel to boycott the event.
The
invitation to Ismail Haniyeh, who heads the Hamas administration in
the Gaza Strip, highlights the rift in the Palestinian territories
and will complicate matters for Abbas, whose Western-backed
government sees itself as the sole representative of the Palestinian
people.
Abbas
was also invited to the summit and has said he will attend. His
forces lost control of Gaza in a brief 2007 war with Hamas and he has
since governed only in the occupied West Bank.
Haniyeh
has yet to say whether he will attend.
Iran
has had strained relations with Abbas's Palestinian Authority (PA),
in part due to the PA's peace talks with Israel.
The
PA has even accused Iran of plotting against it and of intervening in
its internal affairs by inciting factions like Hamas to carry out
military attacks on Israel in an attempt to sabotage the peace
process.
Hamas,
in contrast, is sworn to Israel's destruction, a position which is
more aligned with the view of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
who as recently as last week said there is no place for Israel in the
Middle East.
ushanbe,
capital of the Central Asian republic of Tajikistan
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