PDA

View Full Version : Hizbollah is at Hamas' service


cerulean
03-27-2004, 11:57 PM
Two Islamist terror groups which could be possble rivals have no difficulty collaborating on their common aims - destruction of Israel and destruction of all non-Islamic states.

'We're at Your Service,' Hizbollah Tells Hamas
Sat Mar 27, 2004 06:02 PM ET

By Mariam Karouny
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Hizbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah told Hamas's new leader on Saturday to consider the Lebanese guerrilla group under his command following the assassination of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin this week.

In a show of unity between the two Islamist groups, Hamas new chief Khaled Meshaal also addressed thousands of Hizbollah supporters at a memorial service for his predecessor Yassin, whom Israel assassinated this week.

Nasrallah told him: "Consider us in Hizbollah, from the secretary-general and leadership down to our fighters and women, members of Hamas, and soldiers under your command."

The two Islamist groups have long been allies and keep in regular contact. Hizbollah is a staunch supporter of a more than three-year-old Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation, and the group attacked Israeli posts in a disputed border area on Monday in response to Yassin's killing.

Mourners held pictures of the dead cleric, whose group has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings, amid a sea of Hizbollah and Palestinian flags.

"I say to our brothers in Palestine: We in Lebanon are with you. Be sure that your blood is our blood and your sheikh is our sheikh. We share the same destiny and this means that our fight is one," Nasrallah said.

Nasrallah told the gathering in Beirut's predominantly Shi'ite southern suburbs that Israelis were planning to plant explosives at unspecified targets, but gave no further details except to say:

"I'm saying that in some of these places we are going to be waiting for them."

Nasrallah, whose group fought Israel's 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon until it withdrew its forces in May 2000, said Israeli suggestions he could be next on its hit list did not scare him.

Meshaal, who lives in exile in Syria, called for similar support from an Arab summit, which was planned for early next week in Tunis but was postponed late on Saturday because of differences between Arab governments on reforms.

Speaking before the summit was postponed, he asked them to support what he called resistance in Palestine and Lebanon and to sever any relations they had with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Meshaal said Hamas's response to Israel's deadly missile strike against Yassin would be confined to Israel and the Palestinian territories.

"One of our priorities is to respond to Sharon's crime. We will not say what kind of response but I say that our resistance will be confined to fighting the Zionist occupation on Palestinian land," Meshaal said.

cerulean
04-03-2004, 02:24 PM
Some more at Hamas' service:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/411917.html

Radical Shiite cleric declares solidarity with Hamas
By The Associated Press

KUFA, Iraq - A radical Shiite Muslim cleric has expressed solidarity with the militant Palestinian group Hamas and said that he should be considered the group's "striking arm" in Iraq.

"I have said and I repeat my expression of solidarity which Hassan Nasrallah called for to stand with Hamas," Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said Friday in a reference to Nasrallah, the leader of the militant Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah.

Last month, Nasrallah announced that his party would close ranks with Hamas.

"Let (Hamas) consider me their striking arm in Iraq because the fate of Iraq and Palestine is the same," al-Sadr said during a Friday prayer sermon in Kufa, his home base south of Baghdad. He did comment on what he meant by the phrase.

The announcement followed Israel's assassination of Hamas' spiritual leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin last month.

"We promise the Palestinians and all the oppressed that we will fight and defeat all the oppressors. Let everyone know that anyone who attacks one of our symbols, like Sheik Ahmed Yassin, can attack followers of the Shiite belief," al-Sadr said.

Al-Sadr, who lives in the southern city of Najaf, has been an outspoken critic of the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, but has not called for attacking the occupying forces.

Last month, the U.S.-led coalition shutdown a newspaper considered to be his mouthpiece, saying it was inciting violence against coalition troops.

At least 20,000 al-Sadr supporters held Friday prayers in front of the coalition's headquarters in Baghdad to protest the closure of the newspaper.

RichardP
04-18-2004, 11:55 AM
Originally posted by cerulean
Some more at Hamas' service:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/411917.html

Thanks good read and interesting, as it confirms to me what I have believed and out government took it's sweet time doing.

Oh Jerusalem
04-18-2004, 12:15 PM
Originally posted by cerulean
Two Islamist terror groups which could be possble rivals
How do they rival each other? They compliment each other! :confused:

Kev
04-18-2004, 12:22 PM
Technically then, it would show that Sadr is associated with Hizbullah who is with Hamas and in essense is attacking America now.
Without having to come right out and say so and feel the wrath of the USA.