PLO rejects idea of joining Yarmouk fighting

PLO rejects idea of joining Yarmouk fighting

RAMALLAH - Agence France-Presse
PLO rejects idea of joining Yarmouk fighting

Rubble and heavy damage remain on a deserted street during a government escorted visit to Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus, Syria, Thursday, April 9, 2015. AP Photo

The Palestinian leadership has rejected the idea of joining the conflict in Syria's Yarmouk camp, apparently ruling out involvement in a joint military operation to expel the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
      
The position was made clear in a statement released late Thursday by the Palestine Liberation Organisation from its headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
      
It came just hours after Ahmed Majdalani, a senior PLO official who is currently in Damascus for talks, said 14 Palestinian factions backed the idea of a joint military operation with the Syrian army to expel the ISIL jihadists from the camp where more than 15,000 people, mostly Palestinian refugees, are trapped.
      
But the PLO said its traditional position of non-involvement had not changed.
      
"We refused to drag our people and their camps into the hellish conflict which is happening in Syria and we categorically refuse to become one of the parties involved in the armed conflict that is taking place in Yarmuk," it said.
      
"We refuse to be drawn into military actions, whatever or wherever they are, and we call for other means to ensure the safety of lives in Yarmuk and to prevent more destruction and forced displacement."       

Majdalani had said the Palestinian forces would work in an "integrated" fashion "with the Syrian state to clear the camp of terrorists".
      
ISIL jihadists entered the Yarmuk camp in southern Damascus last week, quickly capturing large swathes of the district, sparking international concern for the residents inside.
      
Once home to some 160,000 Syrian and Palestinian residents, Yarmuk has been devastated by violence since late 2012, with about 18,000 people left in the camp.
      
Since the ISIL attack on April 1, around 2,500 people have managed to escape, some giving a grisly account of the atrocities perpetrated inside the camp by the jihadist forces.
      
The Palestinian leadership has frequently said it "would not get involved in (internal) Syrian affairs".