Alwaght-Palestinian resistance movements have condemned remarks made by Saudi Prince Turki al-Faisal at a gathering of MKO terrorists in Paris, saying such remarks serve the Israeli regime.
Faisal, who previously served as Saudi Arabia's spy chief, made outrageous remarks at a conference of the anti-Iran MKO terrorist group on Saturday in Paris claiming that the Islamic Republic of Iran supports Hamas and Islamic Jihad resistance movements in Palestine in order to cause instability in the region.
The Islamic Jihad said Faisal's remarks serve the Israeli agenda that seeks to eliminate the Palestinian cause and open all the Arab and Islamic capitals to the Israeli regime.
"We tell those people: if you can't stand up for Palestine and its people at least don't stand by the Zionist entity to condemn the victim," the Islamic Jihad movement said in a statement on Sunday.
"The Saudi Muslim people won't accept to pave the way for the Israelis to reach Mecca and Medina." For its part, Hamas condemned the remarks, saying they were “baseless.”
"Everyone knows that Hamas is a Palestinian movement fighting the Zionist occupation in the land of Palestine, and has only a Palestinian agenda ... and it adopts the concept of moderate Islam,” said a statement by the group.
Hamas further accused Faisal of saying things that serve the "Zionist occupation and provide it with further pretexts to carry out aggression against the Palestinian people."
The Ahrar Movement also condemned the remarks by the ex-Saudi spy chief saying that, "the Arab nation supposed to provide all kinds of support for the Palestinian people and their resistance in the face of the cancerous tumor that is Israel instead of criticizing them and giving the occupation pretexts to justify its crimes and massacres against them."
Prince Turki al-Faisal's 30-minute address to the gathering of the MKO terrorist group in Paris on showed a Saudi sponsored convergence between the outfit and Takfiri terrorist groups.
The MKO is the most hated terrorist group by the Iranians because of its history of assassinations and bombings and for siding with former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in his eight-year war on Iran in the 1980s.