Hamas’s founding charter was announced to the world from a Gaza refugee camp in 1988. The setting for its first ever policy update on Monday night – a glitzy hotel in Doha – shows how nearly 30 years on, the organisation’s aims have shifted.

While the new manifesto is widely viewed as a rebrand for the fundamentalist Islamist group that seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, many of the new declarations have been discussed by Hamas officials for years.

The decision to present a more pragmatic political programme now is the result of both the growing dissatisfaction of Gazans with nothing to show after 10 years of Hamas rule, and the pressure of strained relations with the rival Palestinian Authority (PA), Egypt, Israel and the new US administration.

The new document – four years in the making – is still a milestone in the group’s history. While it does not explicitly recognise the state of Israel, it accepts the borders of a Palestinian state within the pre-1967 boundaries for the first time, and drops the anti-Semitic language for which the original charter was heavily criticised.

It also erases all mentions of ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, the pan-Arab Islamist movement which has been banned by the authorities in neighbouring Egypt.

“The document gives us a chance to connect with the outside world,“ spokesperson Fawzi Barhoum told reporters in Qatar on Monday.

“Our message is: Hamas is not radical. We are a pragmatic and civilised movement. We do not hate the Jews. We only fight who occupies our lands and kills our people.”

The enemy within: life under Hamas Show all 2 1 /2 The enemy within: life under Hamas The enemy within: life under Hamas Militants rally in Gaza City AFP/Getty Images The enemy within: life under Hamas Graffiti in a refugee camp AFP/Getty Images

“Hamas’s movement is a viable, renewable developing movement in their ideologically awareness and political performance as much as it is developing in its struggle and fighting aspects,” Khaled Mashaal, the organisation’s outgoing exiled leader, added.

The perceived softening of Hamas’s stance has been dismissed by Israeli authorities. A spokesperson for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the group was just “attempting to fool the world” it had changed its terrorist stripes.

But the signalling of a new direction is as much about internal Palestinian politics as international relations, said Diana Buttu, a Ramallah-based political analyst and former advisor to Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) chair and PA President Mahmoud Abbas.

“This turns up the pressure on Abbas,” she told The Independent. “The PA has been exerting enormous pressure on Gaza recently: financially, trade tariffs, aid.

“But he can no longer say that Hamas is too extremist as an excuse not to restart the reconciliation process with the PA now.”

Whether the official policy changes will be enough to improve relations with either the PA or Egypt, which has maintained a crippling border blockade against Hamas since 2007, remains to be seen.

And while the new declarations are a marked departure from Hamas’s founding charter, since the group still refuses to recognise previous PLO-brokered peace deals and to denounce the use of violence, the international community is unlikely to reconsider its near-universal status as a terrorist organisation.

Hamas’s announcement comes just two days before President Abbas is due to visit US President Donald Trump in Washington DC.