- Fatah al-Intifada
Fatah al-Intifada (Arabic, "Fatah Uprising", فتح الانتفاضة) is a
Palestinian militant faction founded byCol. Said al-Muragha , better known as 'Abu Musa'. The group is often referred to as the 'Abu Musa Faction'. Officially it refers to itself as the Palestinian National Liberation Movement - "Fatah" ("حركة التحرير الوطني الفلسطيني - "فتح), the identical name of the majorFatah movement. Fatah al-Intifada is not part of thePLO .History
Rupture with PLO
Originally part of Fatah, Fatah al-Intifada broke away from the organization in 1983, during the PLO's participation in the
Lebanese Civil War . The split was due to differences between Abu Musa andYassir Arafat over a number of issues, including military decisions and corruption. Fatah al-Intifada was formed withSyria n support and quickly attracted a number of Palestinian guerrillas disillusioned with Arafat's role in Fatah and thePalestine Liberation Organization (PLO). There was also a political dimension: the organization took a more leftist view than the generally apolitical Fatah, and usedsocialist phraseology. Abu Musa is known to have advocated the view that theLebanese Civil War was not a sectarian conflict, but a form ofclass war . Syria provided extensive backing as the Abu Musa forces attacked Arafat loyalists in Fatah, while several radical PLO organizations in theRejectionist Front stayed on the sidelines. The fighting led to heavy losses on both sides, and helped Syria extend its influence into Palestinian-held areas of Lebanon. Fatah al-Intifada quickly fell under the dominance of the Syrian army, and came to be widely regarded as a Syrian puppet organization.War of the camps
In 1985-88, Fatah al-Intifada took part in the
War of the camps , a Syrian attempt to root out the PLO from its refugee camp strongholds backed by the ShiiteAmal militia and some Palestinian rejectionist factions. After a joint effort by the Syrian Army and a number of Palestinian and Lebanese groups controlled or supported byDamascus , including Fatah al-Intifada, thePFLP-GC ,as-Sa'iqa , Amal, the SyrianPLA and parts of thePLF , the PLO was gradually expelled from Lebanon in the mid-to late 1980s. By that time Fatah al-Intifada had been reduced to a minor part of Syria's network of militia proxies, with little or no independent decision-making.Decline
By the late 1980s, Fatah al-Intifada had a brief rapprochement with Arafat's Fatah, but due to its opposition to the
Oslo Accords , and generally poor relations between the PLO and the Assad regime, Fatah al-Intifada has not been able to secure a role in today's Palestinian politics. Instead it remains a minor faction in thePalestinian refugee camps of Syria and Lebanon, where it was able to organize under the umbrella of the Syrian military presence until its end in 2005. It remains very much a part of Syrian-sponsored efforts to influence Palestinian politics, regularly backing Syrian initiatives and being a core member of a Syrian-led coalition of Palestinian groups based in Damascus. However, it has little or no influence outside these countries, and there is no known or official Fatah al-Intifada presence in thePalestinian Territories .Fatah al-Islam splinter
In 2006, reports alleged that some 200 members of Fatah al-Intifada had broken away from the main organization to form an extremist Islamist group by the name of
Fatah al-Islam . This movement, which denied ties to Syria and was reportedly involved in conflict with the Syrian government, was based in the northern Lebaneserefugee camp Nahr al-Bared , and professed sympathy foral-Qaida . According to newspaper reports, it was joined by Salafi activists from other countries, such asPakistan ,Jordan ,Algeria andBangladesh , but it remained on the fringe of Palestinian politics, viewed with suspicion by the larger, mainstream factions such as thePLO groups andHamas . Fatah al-Islam took part in a series of violent shootouts with the Lebanese army in May 2007, with several tens of killed and extensive damage to and flight from the Nahr al-Bared camp.Leadership
Abu Musa retired from leadership in the 1990s. The post of Secretary-General is now held by
Abu Khalid al-'Umla , whileAbu Fadi Hammad acts as Regional Secretary-General for Lebanon.Militant activities
During the 1980s, Fatah al-Intifada committed a number of attacks on
Israel , including on Israelicivilian s, but it has not been involved in violence against Israel since sometime before theOslo Accords in 1993. The group is not believed to possess any capacity to attack targets in Israel or theOccupied Palestinian Territories .External links
* [http://www.yafanews.net www.yafanews.net]
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