The apostate leader of Hamas, Ismā’ īl Haniyyah, with his ally Khamenei, leader of the Rāfidah
Dābiq: When did the siege begin on the Yarmūk Camp and how did it affect the people of the camp?
Yarmūk: All praise belongs to Allah, the Strong, the Exalted. May blessings and peace be upon the cheerful warrior and upon his companions and family. As to what follows: O Allah, there is nothing easy except what You made easy and You make sadness easy if You will. O Allah bestow us with shahādah for Your cause purely for Your noble face.
In reality, the total siege of South Dimashq began four years ago. An exception to that siege was the Yarmūk Camp. The regime conspired with Free Syrian Army leaders in the region to keep the camp open in order to empty the huge storehouses found in the district of‘ Aqrabā and Bayt Sahm. These areas were stores for the regime in which it would store staple food supplies like sugar, rice, bulgur, and so on, and it would use the Yarmūk Camp as a passage to move these food supplies out of the storehouses.
The regime worked according to this evil plan for about a year, until it was sure the storehouses
and huge factories were completely emptied and nothing remained in the area except for scarce quantities sufficing the Muslims for a month or two. The work was completed under the gaze of Aknāf Bayt al-Maqdis and they were the ones supervising the only passage into the camp. The passage was closed on 15 Ramadān 1433, and it was at that time that hunger started assaulting the Muslims’ bodies and death started reaping their souls until more than 170 people died due to lack of supplies and hunger.
Dābiq: What is the relationship between Aknāf Bayt al-Maqdis and Hamas? Did Hamas take part militarily, operationally, politically, or through propaganda, in the war against the Islamic State?
Yarmūk: Aknāf Bayt al-Maqdis is Hamas’ branch in South Dimashq. This faction was established during the beginning of the events in Shām for a fundamental aim, which was the creation of an internal force considered“ revolutionaries” who at the same time act as guards defending regimecontrolled Dimashq; and Aknāf succeeded in this task. As for what concerns the relationship between Hamas and Aknāf, the names of the three
dabiq 67