Appendix G - Statement of Reasons – Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ)
Palestinian
Islamic Jihad
(Also known as:
al-Quds Brigades, Harakat al-Jihad al-Islami fi Filistin,
Islamic Jihad,
Islamic Jihad Palestine (UP), Islamic Jihad - Palestine Faction and Islamic
Holy War, PIJ)
The following information is based on publicly available
details about the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ). These details are accurate
and reliable and have been corroborated by classified information.
Basis for listing a terrorist organisation
Division 102 of the Criminal Code provides that for
an organisation to be listed as a terrorist organisation, the Attorney-General
must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the organisation:
(g) is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning, or
assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a
terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or
(h) advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist
act has occurred or will occur).
Details of the organisation
The PIJ is a Sunni fundamentalist group founded in 1979-80
in Egypt by Palestinian members of the Muslim Brotherhood movement. Inspired by
the Iranian revolution and disillusioned with the actions of existing
Palestinian nationalist movements, the PIJ rejected the Muslim Brotherhood's
non-violent position. It has pursued a strategy of conducting terrorist attacks
primarily by firing rockets into Israel from the Palestinian Territories and
also using suicide bombers. The al-Quds Brigade is the military wing of the PIJ
and is responsible for all its terrorist attacks. The PIJ has grown to become
one of the main Palestinian Islamic extremist movements.
In August 1988, Israel expelled two senior leaders of the
PIJ at that time, Fathi Shaqaqi and Abd al-Aziz Odah, to Lebanon where Shaqaqi
reorganised the group, developing closer ties with Iranian Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps elements and Lebanese Hizballah. In 1989 the PIJ
moved its headquarters to Damascus although it continues to maintain a presence
in Lebanon. From this time, the PIJ increasingly used terrorist actions,
including suicide bombings and shootings, to promote its cause. Suicide
bombings, including explosive belts and car bombs, continue to be a favoured
method of attack. In recent years PIJ's primary attack weapon has been firing
rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip. In March 2008, PIJ claimed
responsibility for firing 216 rockets into Israel.
The PIJ sees itself as a radical military organisation.
The PIJ refused to give a formal commitment to a Palestinian unilateral
ceasefire in 2005 and has previously conducted terrorist attacks to derail
peace processes. While it has no ostensible political role, the PIJ is politically
astute. Since Hamas' victory in the Palestinian Legislative Council election in
January 2006, the PIJ has issued statements condemning political compromises
made by Hamas and Fatah towards Israel. The PIJ supported Hamas' victory, but
rejected any notion of participating in government itself.
Despite sectarian differences, the PIJ is allied to and
receives significant support from Hizballah. The PIJ maintains affiliations
with groups such as Hamas, and has carried out joint attacks with other
militant groups such as Hamas and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. The PIJ has
confined its activities to the Middle East and has not deliberately targeted
Western interests. The PIJ's attacks are generally indiscriminate in nature,
seeking to maximise casualties.
Funding for the PIJ is primarily from Iran and Syria.
Syria permits the location of the PIJ headquarters in Damascus. The
relationship between PIJ and Iran has been publicly acknowledged by PIJ
leaders.
Israeli military action against the PIJ over the past
decade has impacted adversely on the capabilities of all Palestinian militant
groups, including the PIJ, albeit often with only local and short-term effect.
Nonetheless, the PIJ remains directly engaged in preparing, planning and
carrying out terrorist acts. This includes suicide bombings and rocket attacks
in 2007, 2008 and 2009. As recently as December 2008, a member of PIJ's al-Quds
Brigades threatened to carry out suicide attacks inside Israel. The PIJ's
attacks and statements indicate its arsenal includes improvised explosive
devices (IEDs); rockets; firearms and rocket propelled grenades. Taken
together, the PIJ continues to have the capability (including access to the
necessary resources) and intent to conduct further terrorist attacks.
The PIJ is led by Dr Ramadan Muhammad Abdullah Shalah, who
became Secretary-General after the October 1995 assassination of former leader
Fathi Shaqaqi in Malta. Ziyad al-Nakhalah (aka Abu Tariq) is the PIJ deputy
Secretary-General.
The precise number of PIJ members is unknown, however the
group's membership base is relatively small, with reports estimating the
al-Quds Brigades membership at anything from approximately 50 to 1000. The
PIJ's main membership base is in the West Bank, Gaza and South Lebanon.
The al-Quds Brigades is the operational arm of the PIJ and
is often credited for conducting PIJ terrorist operations. The PIJ maintains
liaison offices in Damascus, Lebanon and Tehran. Many of the PIJ leaders are
also members of its Shura Council.
Terrorist activity of the organisation
The objectives of the PIJ are the establishment of an
Islamic Palestinian state and the destruction of the state of Israel.
Recent terrorist attacks for which responsibility has been
claimed by or reliably attributed to the PIJ include:
- August 2007 - Two homemade
rockets are fired from the Gaza strip into southern Israel;
- September 2007 - A rocket
attack claimed by the Popular Resistance Committees military wing and the
al-Quds Brigades injures fifty Israeli soldiers at an Israeli military base
in the western Negev desert;
- September 2007 - Al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades and al-Quds Brigades launch rockets at an Israeli
Intelligence building causing damage;
- November 2007 - Two Quds
rockets are fired at Sederot;
- December 2007 - Al-Quds
Brigades fire an RPG at an Israeli jeep east of the town of al-Qararah;
- December 2007 - Al-Quds
Brigades fire thirteen Quds rockets at Sederot;
- January 2008 - Al-Quds
Brigades fire two rockets at Sederot;
- February 2008 - PIJ claims
responsibility for a suicide bombing in the Israeli city of Dimona which
killed one and injured eleven;
- March 2008 -PIJ claims
that throughout March they fired 216 rockets and mortar shells, attacked
Israeli military vehicles in the Gaza Strip, fired six RPG rockets and
detonated roadside bombs;
- April 2008 - Two Israelis
are killed and two more injured in an attack claimed by PIJ and al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades;
- May 2008 - One Israeli
woman is killed in a Qassam rocket attack claimed by PIJ and Hamas;
- May 2008 - Over three
separate days Al-Quds Brigades fire a total of seven rockets at Sederot
and detonate an explosive device next to an Israeli jeep near Juhr al-Dik;
- May 2008 - PIJ claim
responsibility for a suicide attack which only kills the attacker;
- November 2008 - Al-Quds
Brigades fire two Aqsa rockets at the Magen post, two Quds rockets at
Sederot and one Quds rocket east of Khan Yunis;
- December 2008 - Al-Quds
Brigades fire one Quds rocket at Sederot and two mortar shells at
Kissufim;
- December 2008 - Al-Quds
Brigades rocket attack kills one at Nahal Oz kibbutz;
- January 2009 - PIJ claim
responsibility for firing twelve rockets at Sederot, Ashqelon, Kefar Aza
and Be'eri; and
- February 2009 - PIJ and
one of the Popular Resistance Committee factions claim responsibility for
firing rockets and mortars into Israel, the first attacks since the ceasefire
was declared.
As demonstrated, PIJ is directly preparing, planning,
assisting in or fostering the doing of terrorist acts. PIJ's military wing,
al-Quds Brigade, carries out the terrorist attacks on behalf of PIJ. It is considered
that the acts attributable to the PIJ are terrorist acts as they:
x.
are done with the intention of advancing a political cause, namely, the establishment
of an Islamic Palestinian state and the destruction of the state of Israel;
xi.
are intended to coerce or influence by intimidation the governments of foreign
countries, including Israel, and/or intimidate sections of the public; and
xii.
constitute acts which cause serious physical harm to persons, including death,
as well as serious damage to property.
Other relevant information
The PIJ is listed as a proscribed terrorist organisation
by the governments of the United Kingdom, United States and Canada. The PIJ is
also listed by the European Union for the purposes of its anti-terrorism
financing measures.