Hamas looks to its soul brothers in al Qaeda for funding

UPI:

A leader of the Palestinian Hamas organization has met with an al-Qaida fundraiser in Yemen, the Jerusalem Post reported Friday.

The meeting, two weeks ago at a fundraising event by the Hamas office in Yemen, was between Khaled Marshaal and Sheikh Abd al-Majid al-Zindani, said by the United States to be a fundraiser for al-Qaida and a spiritual leader of Osama bin Laden.

The Jerusalem Post report said that at the event Zindani praised Hamas suicide bombers and urged people to donate money to the organization, whose political wing won recent Palestinian elections in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and now control the Palestinian Authority government.

"The Hamas government is the Palestinian people's government today," Zindani said. "It is the jihad-fighting, steadfast, resolute government of Palestine."

Marshaal is a leader of Hamas in Damascus, the Syrian capital, which is the headquarters of Hamas' armed wing.

Dore Gold, former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations and current head of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, said the meeting between Marshaal and Zindani underscores commonality between the two groups.

"This meeting reinforces the fact that Hamas and al-Qaida come out of the same ideological well-spring of global jihad and the Muslim Brotherhood," the newspaper quoted Dore. "They still share the same financial structure to this day."

Senior Israeli Defense Force officials have said recently that al-Qaida has established cells in the Gaza Strip and was in the process of doing the same in the West Bank.

...

The withholding of funds from Hamas may have an added benefit of draining funds from al Qaeda. Hamas is scrambling for funds to pay for basic goverment functions which also drains it resources for terror operation. While Iran has promise to make up for the shortfall after teh US and Euros stopped funding the PA after it was taken over by the terror organization, it clearly has not come through since the police are demonstrating over not being paid for two weeks.

Update: The BBC reports that Iran is donating $50 million. It is not clear from the story whether this is a one time contribution or a monthly stipend. Either way it far short of the $170 million a month that the PA spends, not to mention its $1.7 billion debt.

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