The leadership campaign of Jeremy Corbyn was part-funded by a man closely connected to the EU-designated terror group Hamas, it has been alleged.

Dr Ibrahim Hamami, an outspoken supporter of the Palestinian Islamic group, reportedly gave £2,000 to Mr Corbyn in August.

The GP, who is also a supporter of the current spate of violence in Israel, is one of just three key individuals to have made donations to Mr Corbyn’s campaign.

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Jeremy Corbyn (left, arriving at the CND conference in London today) has been accused of being part-funded by Dr Ibrahim Hamami (right), a man closely connected to the EU-designated terror group Hamas

The Labour leader further misspelled the donor’s surname, failing to reveal his true identity in a declaration to Parliamentary authorities.

Mr Corbyn listed the donation in the Commons register of members’ interests as being from ‘Dr Ibrahim Hamam’, according to The Telegraph.

Dr Hamami is well known to Mr Corbyn, who has previously described Hamas members as ‘friends’.

But this is not the first time Mr Corbyn has come under fire for his alleged connections with terror groups and extremists.

Just last month, Labour’s candidate for London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, launched a devastating assault on Mr Corbyn, claiming that he risked inciting terrorist and anti-Semitic attacks in London.

The West Bank has seen a recent spate of violence, which has left eight Israelis and 39 Palestinians dead in the last month. Pictured, a Palestinian protester throws a Molotov cocktail during clashes with Israeli soldiers in the city of Hebron today

Mr Khan, who is Muslim, suggested that Mr Corbyn’s refusal to sing the National Anthem showed he was unfit to be Prime Minister.

He further denounced the Labour leadership duo’s links to terror groups.

He said Mr McDonnell’s claim that IRA killers should be ‘honoured’ could encourage terrorism in London, and Mr Corbyn’s support for Palestinian terror groups could fuel anti-Semitism in the UK.

When asked to comment on Mr Corbyn’s alleged connections to Hamas and Hezbollah, Mr Khan said Labour had to ditch its ‘anti-Jewish’ image, which was ‘not acceptable’ in Britain.

Mr Corbyn was elsewhere caught on camera declaring his friendship for Ibrahim Hewitt, a highly controversial Muslim figure who branded homosexuality a ‘great sin’ comparable to paedophilia and incest.

Speaking at a pro-Palestinian event in East London in February 2013, Mr Corbyn said: ‘I’ve got to know Ibrahim Hewitt, the Chair, extremely well, and I consider him to be a very good friend, and I think he’s done a fantastic job.’

Dr Hamami praised the recent violence in the West Bank last week on his Facebook page, describing the attacks as acts of ‘dignity, freedom and honour’. Pictured, Palestinian protesters prepare to throw a Molotov cocktail during clashes with Israeli soldiers in Hebron today

Israeli policemen check the body of a Palestinian man who was shot dead today after he drew a knife and tried to attack officers, in the latest violent attack in the West Bank

Just last month, Labour’s candidate for London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, launched a devastating assault on Mr Corbyn (pictured today in London), claiming that he risked inciting terrorist and anti-Semitic attacks in London

Khan’s comments were echoed by fellow Labour MP Chuka Umunna, whose Streatham constituency includes Brixton, hit by riots in the 1980s.

Dr Hamami is the founder and director of the Palestinian Affairs Centre, a pro-Hamas group, and a columnist for an official Hamas newspaper, the Filastin.

He praised the recent violence in the West Bank last week on his Facebook page, describing the attacks as acts of ‘dignity, freedom and honour’.

In what some have branded the ‘third Intifada’, a recent spate of violence in Israel has seen eight Israelis and 39 Palestinians killed in the last month.

The violence began on October 1, when a suspected cell of Hamas murdered a Jewish settler couple in the West Bank in front of their children.

THE VIOLENCE THAT MANY HAVE BRANDED THE 'THIRD INTIFADA' Although literally meaning ‘shaking’, the word Intifada is more typically translated as ‘uprising’ or ‘resistance’ against oppression. The First Intifada was a Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, which lasted from December 1987 until the Madrid Conference in 1991. It was sparked after an Israeli Defence Forces’ truck collided with a civilian car in the Jabalia refugee camp, killing four Palestinians. A protest movement arose in the wake of the incident, involving unarmed resistance and civil disobedience, including refusal to pay taxes, graffiti and widespread throwing of stones and Molotov cocktails. In the intifada’s first year, Israeli security forces killed 311 Palestinians, including a high proportion of children and teenagers. According to Save the Children, some seven per cent of all Palestinian children suffered injuries from shootings, beatings or tear gas over the first two years. The Second Intifada took place from September 2000 to 2005. Advertisement

Last week, a 20-year-old from the West Bank city of Hebron was shot dead in front of TV cameras after allegedly trying to stab a security guard near Damascus Gate.

Later the same evening, heavily-armed police stormed a supermarket in downtown Jerusalem after an elderly woman was stabbed outside a bus station.

Earlier attacks included a man driving his car into a bus stop of Israelis before hacking one of them to death.

A second individual donor, Ted Honderich, a retired professor at University College London, who gave £5,000 to Mr Corbyn’s campaign, has also been exposed as an alleged supporter of Palestinian extremism.

He wrote in a newspaper in 2011 that Palestinians ‘have a moral right to their terrorism within historiac Palestine against neo-Zionism’.

Mr Corbyn said he is opposed to violence, and claimed his links with Hamas are about promoting dialogue and peace.

Palestinian women chant anti-Israeli slogans during the funeral procession of a 19-year-old man who was shot dead during clashes with Israeli troops last Thursday in the West Bank village of Beit Furik, on the outskirts of Nablus

Meanwhile, campaigners further insisted today that Mr Corbyn will never change his mind on Trident.

Kate Hudson, general secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) said she could not see the ‘lifelong member of the CND’ abandoning his beliefs.

She said: ‘He’s been a marvellous support and strength to CND and it’s great that as he takes the debate forward in the Labour Party in an open and democratic fashion he has retained this important connection with us.’

Ms Hudson added that she believed Mr Corbyn’s chances of convincing the rest of the party to commit to nuclear disarmament were ‘very good’.

Neither Mr Corbyn nor Dr Hamami were available for immediate comment.

For more of the latest on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn visit http://www.dailymail.co.uk/labour

CORBYN AND THE EXTREMISTS Jeremy Corbyn delivered a speech at a London event entitled 'Palestine: Journey Through The Ages' in February 2013. His fellow speakers included: Dr Daud Abdullah , who was accused of advocating attacks on the Royal Navy, led a boycott of Holocaust Memorial Day, and signed a declaration in support of Hamas

Sheikh Zahir Mahmood , who has been filmed saying, ‘Hamas are not terrorists, they are freedom fighters’ Dr Swee Ang , a pro-Palestinian activist who once sent emails imploring people to watch an anti-Semitic video presented by David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard Uthman Lateef , who was banned from speaking at another 2013 event, organised by Education Aid for Palestinians (EAP), because of his ‘anti-democratic and homophobic preaching’ Hamza Tzortzis , who has been filmed giving a speech in which he said, ‘we as Muslims reject the idea of freedom of speech, and even the idea of freedom’ Yvonne Ridley , a British Muslim convert who has been filmed chanting, ‘victory to Hezbollah! Victory to Hamas! Victory to the Palestinians! Victory to the Intifada! Allahu Akhbar!’, and claiming that ‘drinking Coca-Cola is like drinking the blood of Palestinian children’ Dr Daud Abdullah , who , who signed a declaration in support of Hamas and military action, led a boycott of Holocaust Memorial Day, and was accused of advocating attacks on the Royal Navy Advertisement