Australia said Thursday it would list the whole of Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas as a terrorist organisation, the latest Western nation to do so.
Canberra had previously listed Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades military wing as a terror group, but the new designation will list the organisation in its entirety, including its political wing.
Hamas has fought successive wars with Israel since it seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007.
It swept the last Palestinian parliamentary elections in 2006 and is the main opposition to ageing president Mahmud Abbas’s Fatah movement.
“The views of Hamas and the violent extremist groups listed today are deeply disturbing, and there is no place in Australia for their hateful ideologies,” said home affairs minister Karen Andrews.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett welcomed the Australian move, tweeting that it marked “another important step in the global fight against terrorism”.
The designation will place restrictions on financing or providing other support to Hamas – with certain offences carrying a 25-year prison sentence.
“It is vital that our laws target not only terrorist acts and terrorists, but also the organisations that plan, finance and carry out these acts,” Andrews said.
The US has long designated Hamas a terror group.
A similar EU decision had been the subject of a protracted court battle, that eventually resulted in Hamas being returned to the terror list.