Senior political leader of the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, Khalil al-Hayya

Hamas is to unveil a new version of its controversial founding charter, which called for the destruction of Israel in a bid to ease its international isolation, party officials said.
Leaders of the movement have long spoken of the more limited aim of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip without explicitly setting it out in its charter.
But after years of internal debate, the party leadership is to publish a supplementary charter at a conference in Qatar on Monday that will formally accept the idea of a state in the territories occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967.
In a sop to hard-liners within the movement, the original 1988 charter will not be dropped just supplemented, and there will be no recognition of Israel, as demanded by the international community.
The new document will clearly present the objective of establishing a “sovereign Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital in the 1967 borders,” a senior Hamas official told AFP.
“It does not constitute in any way a recognition of the Zionist entity,” the official added.
Leading Hamas official Bassem Naim said the new document was the fruit of four years of discussion within the movement, which has fought three wars with Israel since it seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007.
Another Hamas leader, Ahmed Yusef, told AFP the updated charter was “more moderate, more measured and would help protect us against accusations of racism, anti-Semitism and breaches of international law.”
It will “differentiate between Jews as a religious community on one hand, and the occupation and Zionist entity on the other,” he said.
But hard-liner Mahmud Zahar insisted there would be no change in the party’s commitment to armed resistance against Israel, which has put it on the terror blacklists of the EU and the US.
He said the new document was “a tool for the future but it does not mean we’re changing our principles.”

Source: Arab News