"The election showed the wonderful face of democracy within Hamas. It was carried out smoothly," a Hamas official said about last month's vote, citing security considerations for the decision to keep it secret.
"Our goals are clear and we have a policy that does not change, and that is there can be no recognition of Israel," the official said.
The Reuters report did not spell out
Hamas policy, which is armed
Jihad against Israel until it is destroyed. According to the Hamas charter, negotiations and international conferences are a waste of time. Armed Jihad is the only policy possible, and the goal must be to eliminate the Zionist state. Hamas claims that "Zionists" and freemasons were responsible for the French Revolution, the Russian revolution and many other social upheavals.
Officials in the group said some veteran leaders had lost seats on the Shura Council to younger candidates but senior figures Ismail Haniyeh, Mahmoud al-Zahar and Saeed Seyam were re-elected to the policy-setting body and to the politburo.
The three are Hamas' top leaders in the Gaza Strip, territory the movement seized in fighting against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah forces in June 2007.
Several members of Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, were elected to the politburo, which executes policy and strategy decided by the Shura Council.
"When you have a fair election, people do not expect to remain in their posts forever and Hamas remains a strongly integrated group," one official said.
In Hamas, candidates do not actively seek nomination but their names are put forward by activists or mosques in their hometowns.
Hamas last held an internal ballot in 2006 before it won a Palestinian parliamentary election that year in the Gaza Strip and West Bank.
The Hamas official said the group's priorities remained reaching an end to divisions with Fatah and a continuation of "resistance" against Israel, which tightened a blockade of the Gaza Strip after the 2007 takeover of the territory.
Despite its declared policy of continuing to fight Israel, Hamas agreed to a ceasefire along the Gaza border in June and has said it would accept a Palestinian state in territory captured by Israeli forces during the 1967 Six Day War in return for a long-term truce, according to Reuters.
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