Syrians angry as Hamas quietly announces 'normalisation' with brutal Assad regime
Palestinian group announced on Thursday that it will "go ahead"ÌýwithÌýÌýties with the brutal Syrian regime, led by dictator .
The group released a statement that opened with a message ofÌýsupport for the Syrian regime after recent Israeli attacks on airports in the country.
The Palestinian movement alsoÌýthanked Syria for its "support" for the Palestinian people.
At the end of their six-point statement, the group declaredÌýit will normalise ties with the Assad regime.
"Hamas confirms that it goes ahead with its decision to restore ties with the Syrian Arab Republic to serve the interest of the Arab and Islamic Ummah, above all the Palestinian cause, especially in light of the escalating regional and international developments concerning the Palestinian cause", the last sentence of the statement said.
Analysts believe this point could have been buried beneath statements condemning Israeli airstrikes - including on Aleppo and Damascus airports -Ìýto downplay the controversial normalisation move.
The Assad regime is responsible for the vast majority of civilian deaths in the Syria war, with repeated bombings, sieges, and even gas attacks on opposition towns and villages.
It is also thought to have killed as many as 100,000 detainees since the start of the 2011 pro-democracyÌýuprising.
Most Arab states boycotted the regime after the massacres of civilians, but some have established diplomatic, economic, and security ties with Damascus.
Hamas, which runs the besieged Gaza strip,Ìýthanked Syria "for supporting the Palestinian people and their just cause. We look forward to the day when Syria restores its leading position in the Arab and Islamic Ummah".
"Hamas supports all sincere efforts aimed to achieve peace, stability, and prosperity in Syria", calling for an end to "Israeli malicious plans intended to divide the country and steal its resources."Ìý
"We, at the national, Arab, and Islamic levels, are united in the face of the Israeli schemes against Syria."
Palestinian and Syrian activists condemned Hamas' latest move, calling them out for their "hypocrisy" after announcing the planned normalisation with the Assad regime, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people.
Hamas was based in Damascus until a year into the Syrian uprising in 2012, a move that was broadly seen as tacit support for the anti-regime movement.
Assad's Syrian 🇸🇾 forces besieged, bombarded & assaulted Yarmouk, destroying wide portions of the overcrowded camp/over 60%
— Saad Abedine (@SaadAbedine)
4,048 Palestinian 🇵🇸 refugees killed by Assad forces, 631 tortured to DEATH
But Hamas said it'll go ahead w restoring ties w Assad
±õ³ÙÌýÌýthe revolution after the regime's bloody suppression of Syria'sÌýuprising.
The Syrian opposition to continue its boycott of the brutal AssadÌýregime when signs of normalisation appeared in 2019.
It comes after video footage of a 2013 massacre in the Damascus suburb of Tadamon - where many Palestinian refugees displaced by Israel in 1948 had resettled - showed the regime cruelly executing at least 41 people, manyÌýof whom are believed to be Palestinians.
During the Syrian conflict, the regime also imposed a starvation siege on the Palestinian Yarmouk refugee camp, south of Damascus, which was controlled by opposition forces.
Hamas's refusal to back the Syrian regime and apparent sympathy with the 2011 uprising caused a rift not only with the Assad regime but also alliesÌýÌýand the Lebanese HezbollahÌýgroup, which support Assad with men and equipment.
The conflict in Syria began in 2011 and has seen over 500,000 people killed, most of them in bombardments of civilian areas by the regime and its ally Russia.