(Reuters) - Hamas and Iran
have repaired a close political and military relationship frayed by the
Syrian civil war, the Palestinian Islamist group's deputy leader said on
Wednesday. Patching up ties with Tehran could ease Hamas's financial and political isolation. Israel is blockading the Gaza Strip, while Egypt, battling Islamist militants in neighboring Sinai, has largely kept its Gaza frontier closed. Speaking
in his Gaza office, overlooking the Mediterranean, Moussa Abu Marzouk
said: "I believe that bilateral relations between us and the Islamic
Republic of Iran are back on track." He also told Reuters that Hamas, the dominant armed movement in the Gaza Strip, was not seeking a new war with Israel and wanted to see the enclave rebuilt after a devastating 50-day conflict in July and August. Last week, a Hamas delegation visited Iran,
long a major supplier of military and financial aid to the group. Hamas
has been hostile toward Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is backed
by Tehran in the three-year-old Syrian war. In a sign that weapons supplies from Iran
may have slowed, Hamas used mostly locally-made long-range rockets to
attack Israeli cities in the conflict five months ago. It launched
Iranian-produced rockets in similar strikes in 2012. "There
are many indications that ... relations have been resumed in the proper
way, as in the past," Abu Marzouk said, without elaborating. Turning
to reconstruction in Gaza, where tens of thousands of homes were
damaged or destroyed in the summer fighting, he said Hamas would remain
committed to an Egyptian-brokered truce that ended the war as long as Israel abided by it. "We
are keen to see all building materials reach people who need them and
those whose houses were destroyed. It is in our interest that the
circumstances that produced the war do not return," he said. On Sunday, a spokesman for Hamas's armed wing cautioned there could be a "new explosion" with Israel
unless reconstruction was speeded up. More than 2,100 Palestinians,
mostly civilians, were killed in the Gaza war, local officials said. Israel put its death toll at 67 soldiers and six civilians. Abu Marzouk said only $150 million out of $2.7 billion pledged internationally for reconstruction had materialized.
Hamas' deputy chief says it has patched up ties with Iran
Reuters
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