Alliance of political factions
Alliance of Palestinian Forces
????? ????? ??????????
|
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Dates of operation
| Since 1993
|
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Group(s)
|
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Headquarters
| Damascus
, Syria
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The
Alliance of Palestinian Forces
(
APF
;
Arabic
:
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) is a
Damascus
-based loose political alliance of eight
Palestinian
organizations.
[1]
The Alliance was created in
Damascus
in December 1993 by ten Palestinian factions opposed to the negotiations that led up to the
Oslo Accords
.
[2]
[3]
Amongst the ten founding members all but
Hamas
were headquartered in Damascus.
[4]
Eight of the founding members were previously members of the
Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO), the other two being Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad
.
The Alliance calls for the liberation of all Palestinian lands.
[2]
[3]
It has sometimes been referred to as the '
Damascus 10
'.
[5]
[6]
Formation
[
edit
]
The idea of a new rejectionist Palestinian coalition emerged with the
Madrid Israeli-Palestinian talks in 1991
.
[7]
In the process of building the new coalition, there had been disagreements between different factions on how it would function. Hamas had proposed a mechanism where the central command of the coalition would have 40 members, out of whom 40% would belong to Hamas, 40% would belong to other factions and the remaining 20% would be 'independents'. The Hamas proposal was rejected by several of the other factions. In the view of the
secular
factions, Hamas tried to replicate the experience of the
Fatah
dominance in PLO. In the end the factions agreed in December 1993 to form the Alliance of Palestinian Forces with each faction, regardless of size, would have two seats in the APF central command.
[8]
The founding platform of APF was based on the
1968 PLO Covenant
and the
1974 PLO Program of Stages
.
[9]
The first press conference of the new body was held at the PFLP-GC office in the
Yarmouk Camp
.
[7]
The APF's first declaration denounced the
Declaration of Principles
signed by
Yasser Arafat
and
Yitzhak Rabin
.
[8]
The coalition stated that the PLO no longer represented the Palestinian people and that the Oslo Accords were non-binding for the Palestinians.
[2]
[3]
[8]
Members
[
edit
]
The ten founding members of APF were:
The two main secular factions, the PFLP and the DFLP, left the Alliance in 1998 as a result of their willingness to engage in dialogue with Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority.
[7]
Split
[
edit
]
The APF contained nationalist,
leftist
and Islamist currents, with widely different ideological objectives.
[10]
Whilst the notion of armed struggle was a central concept in APF discourse, the Alliance failed to develop any strategic coordination of armed actions.
[4]
The PFLP and DFLP split away from APF in 1998.
[7]
In July 1999,
Syrian
government authorities issued an instruction to the Damascus-based factions to end armed actions, a move which meant that the idea of APF as a coordination of armed struggle was abandoned.
[4]
Thus, by the time of the outbreak of the
Second Intifada
, the APF had been a largely marginalized structure.
[7]
Lebanon Popular Committees
[
edit
]
In
Lebanon
, the APF runs Popular Committees, parallel to the Popular Committees of the PLO.
[12]
[13]
The Alliance of Palestinian Forces was able to achieve significant influence in
Palestinian refugee camps
during the period of
Syrian military presence in Lebanon
(which ended in 2005).
[12]
Afterwards, there have been moves for reconciliation and coordination between the PLO and the APF in Lebanon.
[13]
See also
[
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]
References
[
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]