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GAZA CITY: Ismail Haniyeh has been re-elected as leader of the Palestinian group Hamas which rules the Gaza Strip and has fought multiple violent conflicts with Israel.
Haniyeh has been Hamas chief since 2017 and controls the group’s political activities in Gaza, the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the diaspora largely from outside Gaza, splitting his time between Turkey and Qatar for the past two years.
He directed Hamas in an 11-day conflict with Israel in May that left over 250 in Gaza and 13 in Israel dead. An Egyptian-mediated ceasefire has mostly held since.
“Brother Ismail Haniyeh was re-elected as the head of the movement’s political office for a second time,” one Palestinian official told a news agency following an internal election by party members. His term will last four years.
READ MORE: Israel and Hamas both claim victory as ceasefire holds
Haniyeh, aged 58, was the right-hand man to Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in Gaza, before the wheelchair-bound cleric was assassinated in 2004.
Haniyeh led Hamas’ entry into politics in 2006, when they were surprise victors in Palestinian parliamentary elections, defeating a divided Fatah party led by President Mahmoud Abbas.
He became prime minister shortly after the January 2006 victory but Hamas was shunned by the international community. Following a brief civil war, Hamas seized Gaza from the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority, which has limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, in 2007.
Israel has led a blockade of Gaza since then, citing threats from Hamas, which is considered a terrorist organisation by the United States, Israel and the European Union. Haniyeh’s victory caps internal elections that also saw the group’s Gaza chief, Yehya Al-Sinwar, win a second term in March.