16 Apr 2024
Saturday 25 February 2017 - 12:09
Story Code : 252496

Why Iran wants Palestine back on regional agenda

Al Monitor| Ali Hashem: Fatima Navab Safavi is the daughter of Mojtaba Navab Safavi (1924-1955), an Iranian cleric and one of the first to mobilize Iranian masses against Israel back in the early 1950s. Donning the traditional black chador, Safavi told Al-Monitor in an interview, "Years before the [1979] Islamic Revolution, my father was ableto get thousands of young men ready at that time to go and fight to liberate Palestine. Iran's relation to the Palestinian tragedy goes back to that time. My father was one of the first to make people in Iran aware about Palestine."She was among hundreds of Iranian, Arab and other international participants taking part in a conference held in Tehran on Feb. 21-22in support of the Palestinian intifada and the city of Jerusalem.


With regional wars intensifyingfrom Yemen toSyria, and withUS President Donald Trump having officially put Iran "on notice,"the Islamic Republic has chosen to respond in a different manner. Iran has highlighted its decision a year ago to boost its support for Palestinian factions fighting Israel and to say openly that it's putting this issue at the top of its agenda. Tehran's approach indicates how things in the region are changing following the election of Trump and amid reports of a possible Saudi-Israeli alliance backed by the United Statesaimed at preventing Iran from expanding its regional influence.

But it's worth mentioning that if it wasn't for the yearlong renewed dialogue between the Palestinian faction Hamas and Tehran, alongside other mainstream Palestinian groups, little could have happened. Indeed, Palestinian groups complain they are left without any Arab or Islamic support to confront Israel, and that their cause is day by day becoming more forgotten and ignored.

"The relation with Tehran started going in the right track,"Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas official visiting Tehran, told Al-Monitor. He explained that his movement is keen to have good relations with all parties in the Arab world even though the official Arab stance towardthe Palestinian cause is rather weak. He added, "It's in our interest to keep knocking on doors and putting Arab and Muslim leaders before their religious and historical responsibilities towardPalestine."

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