Jamal Abu Samhadana | |
---|---|
جمال أبو سمهدانة | |
Director General of the Executive Force | |
In office 20 April 2006 – 8 June 2006 | |
President | Mahmoud Abbas |
Prime Minister | Ismail Haniyeh |
Personal details | |
Born | 8 February 1963 Rafah, Gaza Strip |
Died | 8 June 2006 Rafah, Gaza Strip |
Nationality | Palestinian |
Political party | Hamas |
Occupation | politician |
Known for | Founding and leading the Popular Resistance Committees |
Jamal Abu Samhadana ( Arabic: جمال أبو سمهدانة, 8 February 1963 – 8 June 2006), from Rafah in the Gaza Strip, was the founder and leader of the Popular Resistance Committees , [1] a former Fatah and Tanzim member, and number two on Israel's list of wanted terrorists.
Abu Samhadana survived an Israeli missile strike in the Gaza Strip in December 2004, [2] but was killed by the Israeli Air Force on 8 June 2006.
On 20 April 2006, Abu Samhadana was appointed Director General of the Executive Force, a new security forces in Gaza, by Said Seyam, Interior Minister of the Palestinian National Authority's new Hamas-led government. [3] [4] Abu Samhadana was quoted as saying that "We have only one enemy. They are Jews. We have no other enemy. I will continue to carry the rifle and pull the trigger whenever required to defend my people." [5]
The appointment "sparked new criticism from the U.S. and Israel and intensified the struggle for control of some 70,000 Palestinian security forces" between Hamas and President Mahmoud Abbas. [6] Abbas subsequently issued a decree banning the formation of the Executive Force that Abu Samhadana was to have headed. [7] However, Hamas defied the President's decree and proceeded with the nomination and the formation of the force.
Although Israel acknowledged that Hamas was largely sticking to a ceasefire, [8] on 8 June 2006, he was assassinated, along with at least three other PRC members, by four missiles fired by Israeli Apache helicopters, guided by Israeli reconnaissance drones, at a PRC camp in Rafah. [9] [10]
At his funeral Samhadana’s supporters called for revenge. [11] Hours after his assassination rockets were fired at Sderot in Israel. [12] The IDF retaliated by bombarding the launch sites on a Gaza beach. During the bombardment period, the civilian Ghalia family was all but wiped out in an explosion. [13] Analysts trace the Samhadana assassination to the rocket fire (on Sderot), through a series of IDF shellings, rocket attacks and commando raids on Gaza that killed over three dozen people, mostly civilians, to the capture of Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalit on June 25. [8] Two days after Shalit's capture, the IDF launched Operation Summer Rains killing over 400 Palestinians and wounding 650. [8]