An Egyptian court 
overturned a decision naming Hamas a terrorist organization Saturday, a 
ruling coming after months of increasing hostility to the blockaded 
rulers of the Gaza Strip. The Urgent Matters Appeals Court cited a lack of jurisdiction as the reason for annulling the earlier court's ruling.
Sami
 Abu Zuhri, Hamas spokesman in Gaza, welcomed the court's ruling, saying
 it would have "positive consequences on the relationship between Hamas 
and Egypt."
Egypt initially declared the group
 a terrorist organization in February. That ruling further isolated 
Hamas, which once found open support under Egypt's toppled Islamist 
President Mohammed Morsi. Egypt's new government recently has begun 
clearing a buffer zone along its border with Gaza Strip in an attempt to
 destroy a cross-border network of tunnels that Hamas considers a 
lifeline.
In recent months Egypt has appeared 
increasingly hostile to Hamas, which it has blamed for violence in the 
country's restive Sinai Peninsula. The movement was founded in 
Gaza in 1987 as an offshoot of the region's Egyptian-originated Muslim 
Brotherhood. 
An
 Egyptian court banned Hamas' military wing, the Izzedine al-Qassam 
Brigades, and designated it a terrorist organization in January. In 
2014, a similar ruling in the same court banned all Hamas activities in 
Egypt and ordered the closure of any Hamas offices, though the order 
apparently was never carried out. It wasn't immediately clear how - or 
if - Saturday's ruling would affect those previous decisions.
 
 

 
 
 
 
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