Hamas says security chief wounded in Israeli attack

The car bombing came as rival factions are trying to implement a new reconciliation agreement


Reuters October 27, 2017
Tawfiq Abu Naeem, head of Hamas-run security forces in Gaza, speaks during a news conference, in Gaza City. PHOTO: REUTERS

GAZA CITY: Hamas' security chief in the Gaza Strip was wounded in a car bombing on Friday in what the militant group said was a failed assassination attempt orchestrated by Israel.

Hamas did not provide any evidence of Israeli involvement. The Israeli military, asked about the explosion in Gaza, said it did not comment on foreign reports.

The car bombing came as rival factions are trying to implement a new agreement meant to end a 10-year rift that has effectively split the Palestinian territories between Hamas in Gaza and the more mainstream Fatah in the occupied West Bank.

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It also coincided with a Hamas crackdown on radical Salafi groups in Gaza which are opposed to the Palestinian rapprochement.

Fatah condemned the attack. Tawfeeq Abu Naeem, Hamas' head of security in Gaza and a strong supporter of the reconciliation deal, was slightly wounded when his car exploded outside a mosque, Hamas said.

Hamas' deputy chief in the territory, Khalil Al-Hayya, said Israel was behind the attack and trying to destabilise the reconciliation deal agreed upon earlier this month.

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Israel has said it will engage with a unified Palestinian government only if Hamas agrees to international demands that include giving up its weapons and stopping its call for Israel's destruction.

Hamas has angered Salafi groups by stepping up a security crackdown and recently detained a senior operative. It also has improved ties with Egypt, which is battling militants across the border in the Sinai peninsula.

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Some disputes arose this week in implementing the reconciliation deal, which calls on Hamas to cede administrative control of Gaza.

Senior Fatah officials travelled to Gaza this week from the West Bank to take control of two government offices there, but they turned back, saying Hamas officials refused their authority. A Fatah spokesperson later said the issue was being resolved.

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