Hamas denied on Wednesday accusations by Jordan that the Islamic militant
group had stored weapons on its territory and said it regretted Amman's
cancellation of a visit by the Palestinian foreign minister.
Israeli soldiers
during an operation at the West Bank village of Derqin, near Jenin, April
18, 2006. [Reuters] |
"These accusations are false and completely contradict the well-known Hamas
attitude that it does not intervene ... in the internal affairs of other
countries," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said.
A Jordanian government spokesman on Tuesday said security forces had seized
rocket launchers and other weapons from a Hamas arms cache and had scrapped a
visit by new Palestinian Foreign Minister and senior Hamas leader Mahmoud
al-Zahar.
The Islamist faction, which is sworn to Israel's destruction and took over
the Palestinian government on March 29 after winning January elections, was also
accused of using Jordan to engage in anti-Israeli activities.
Palestinian deputy prime minister Naser al-Shaer, also from Hamas, said the
new government was not involved.
"We have no information about this incident and we are certain the brethren
in Jordan will find out the Palestinians are not involved in such acts," Shaer
told Reuters.
Zahar is touring Arab states to urgently try to raise funds after the United
States and other world powers suspended direct aid, saying Hamas must renounce
violence and recognize Israel and past interim peace deals.
"We regret the way the Jordanian government used (this) to justify the
cancellation of the visit by Palestinian Foreign Minister Mahmoud al-Zahar at
the last moment," Abu Zuhri said.
Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994 and has helped mediate some
of its negotiations with the Palestinians. Zahar's visit to Jordan would have
been the first by a top Hamas leader since the nation expelled the group's
leadership in 1999.
Jordanian officials privately support U.S.-led efforts to isolate the Hamas
government unless it embraces Middle East peacemaking.
Zahar's first stop late last week was Egypt, which is the only other Arab
country to have a peace treaty with Israel, but he was unable to meet its
foreign minister, who was out of Cairo at the time. Officials denied Zahar had
been snubbed.
Hamas has a large following in Palestinian camps across Jordan. Much of
Jordan's population is of Palestinian origin.