Timeline Harakat al-Mahrumin (حركة المحرومين | The Movement of the Dispossessed) was established by Imam
Musa al-Sadr and member of parliament
Hussein el-Husseini in 1974. On January 20, 1975, the Lebanese Resistance Detachments (also referred to in English as 'Battalions of the Lebanese Resistance') is formed as the military wing of the Movement of the Disinherited under the leadership of al-Sadr. In 1978 the founder al-Sadr disappears in mysterious circumstances while visiting
Libya and was succeeded by
Hussein el-Husseini as leader of Amal. In 1979
Palestinian guerrillas attempt to assassinate then-Secretary General
Hussein el-Husseini by launching missiles into his home, outside
Beirut. In 1980 Hussein el-Husseini resigned from Amal leadership after refusing to "drench Amal in blood" and fight alongside the
PLO or any other faction. That same year,
Nabih Berri became one of the three highest officials of Amal, marking the entry of Amal in the Lebanese Civil War. When the
Iran–Iraq War raged in September 1980, around 500 to 600 Amal volunteers participated in the war next to
Mostafa Chamran, one of the co-founders of Amal. In summer 1982
Husayn Al-Musawi, deputy head and official spokesman of Amal, broke away to form the
Islamist Islamic Amal Movement. In May 1985, heavy fighting erupted between Amal and Palestinian camp militias for the control of the
Shatila and
Burj el-Barajneh refugee camps in Beirut, sparking the so-called "
War of the Camps". Over the following two years the fighting took place in four distinct phases, totalling around eight months of conflict. Amal, despite having tanks, artillery and support from the
Lebanese army’s 6th Brigade, failed in its objective of dislodging PLO fighters from the refugee camps and was left significantly weakened. The siege of the refugee camps caused tension between Amal and Hezbollah who were opposed to the offensive. In December 1985 Nabih Berri of Amal,
Walid Jumblatt of the Druze
Progressive Socialist Party, and
Elie Hobeika of the
Lebanese Forces signed the
Tripartite Accord in Damascus which was supposed to give strong influence to Damascus regarding Lebanese matters. The agreement never came into effect due to Hobeika's ousting. In mid-February 1987 fighting broke out in West Beirut between Amal and the Druze
PLA in what became known as the "War of the Flag". The conflict was sparked when a PLA fighter entered the Channel 7 TV station (
French:
Télé Liban – Canal 7) building in the
Tallet el-Khayyat quarter and replaced the
Lebanese national flag with the PSP flag. Its positions thinly manned due to the
War of the Camps, an alliance of PSP, LCP/
Popular Guard and
SSNP drove out Amal of most of its former positions in West Beirut. As a result, on 21 February, 7,000 Syria commandos, under the command of Major-General
Ghazi Kanaan, were deployed into West Beirut. Assisted by Lebanese
Internal Security Forces (ISF) gendarmes they immediately closed over fifty militia “offices” and banned the carrying of weapons in public. Young men with beards were detained. On February 17, 1988 the American Chief of the
United Nations Truce Supervision Organization (UNTSO) observer mission in Lebanon, Lt. Col.
William R. Higgins, was abducted and later killed after meeting with Amal's political leader of southern Lebanon. It was believed that Hezbollah abducted Higgins, though the party to this day denies it and insists that it was done to create problems between them and the Amal movement. In April 1988, Amal launched an all-out assault on Hezbollah positions in south Lebanon and the southern suburbs of Beirut, which became known as the
War of Brothers. By May 1988 Hezbollah gained control of 80% of the Shi'ite suburbs of
Beirut through well-timed assaults. In 1989 Amal accepted the
Taif agreement (mainly authored by el-Husseini) in order to end the civil war. On 17 July 1990 fighters from the Palestinian
Fatah militia moved into the Iqlim al-Tufah hills, southeast of
Sidon in an attempt to separate fighters from Amal and Hizbullah. Fifteen people had been killed in the fighting. Fatah had played a similar role during clashes in the same area in January. A later report describes two weeks of fighting around Sidon, culminating with Hizbullah taking the village of
Jarjouh from Amal on 16 July. This report puts the number of dead at around two hundred. In September 1991, with background in the Syrian controlled end of the Lebanese Civil War in October 1990, 2,800 Amal troops joined the Lebanese army.
Origin The origins of the Amal movement lie with the
Lebanese cleric of Iranian origin Imam
Musa al-Sadr. In 1974, the
Harakat al-Mahrumin (Movement of the Deprived) was established by al-Sadr and member of parliament
Hussein el-Husseini to attempt to reform the Lebanese system. While acknowledging its support base to be the "traditionally under-represented politically and economically disadvantaged"
Shi'a community, it aimed, according to Palmer-Harik, to seek social justice for all deprived Lebanese. Although influenced by
Islamic ideas, it was a
secular movement trying to unite people along communal rather than religious or ideological lines. On January 20, 1975, the Lebanese Resistance Detachments (also referred to in English as 'The Battalions of the Lebanese Resistance') were formed as a military wing of The Movement of the Disinherited under the leadership of al-Sadr, and came to be popularly known as Amal (from the acronym
Afwaj al-Mouqawma Al-Lubnaniyya). In 1978, al-Sadr disappeared in mysterious circumstances while visiting
Libya, the Amal movement's regional supporter at the time. There are credible allegations that Yasser Arafat asked Gaddafi to "disappear" al-Sadr. Hussein el-Husseini became leader of Amal and was followed by
Nabih Berri in April 1980 after el-Husseini resigned. One of the consequences of the rise of Berri, a less educated leader, the increasing secular yet sectarian nature of the movement and move away from an Islamic context for the movement was a splintering of the movement. ==Military structure and organization==