Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Crypto Terror Financing: Hamas Shifts Tactics In Bitcoin Fundraising |
2019-04-28 |
![]() The Gaza-based Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, which is proscribed by the United States and the European Union, has been calling on its supporters to donate using the digital currency in a fundraising campaign announced online in late January. Originally, it asked donors to send bitcoin to a single digital address, or wallet. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | ||
Hamas: Airlines should avoid Israel's airport | ||
2014-07-13 | ||
![]() "The armed wing of Hamas movement has decided to respond to the Israeli aggression and we warn you against carrying out flights to Ben Gurion airport, which will be one of our targets today because it also hosts a military air base," Reuters quoted a statement by Hamas' Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades as saying. Hamas claimed earlier that it already had fired at least one rocket toward the airport, although no such hit was reported. The terrorist group said it had issued the warning so that airlines could avoid injury to passengers.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas held secret leadership election: official |
2008-09-17 |
Thousands of Hamas members voted in a secret internal ballot in the Gaza Strip that re-elected the Islamist group's most prominent leaders to its highest bodies and signaled no change in policy. "The election showed the wonderful face of democracy within Hamas. It was carried out smoothly," a Hamas official said about last month's vote, citing security considerations for the decision to keep it secret. Officials in the group said some veteran leaders had lost seats on the Shura Council to younger candidates but senior figures Ismail Haniyeh, Mahmoud al-Zahar and Saeed Seyam were re-elected to the policy-setting body and to the politburo. The three are Hamas's top leaders in the Gaza Strip, territory the movement seized in fighting against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah forces in June 2007. Several members of Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, were elected to the politburo, which executes policy and strategy decided by the Shura Council. In Hamas, candidates do not actively seek nomination but their names are put forward by activists or mosques in their hometowns. Hamas last held an internal ballot in 2006 before it won a Palestinian parliamentary election that year in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. The Hamas official said the group's priorities remained an end to divisions with Fatah and a continuation of "resistance" against Israel, which tightened a blockade of the Gaza Strip after the 2007 takeover of the territory. Despite its declared policy of continuing to fight Israel, Hamas agreed to a ceasefire along the Gaza border in June and has said it would accept a Palestinian state in lands captured by Israeli forces in a war in return for a long-term truce. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas issues |
2007-06-12 |
![]() GAZA (Reuters) - Hamas's armed wing threatened on Tuesday to storm security headquarters controlled by the rival Fatah faction in Gaza City unless they are evacuated immediately, an ultimatum verging on a declaration of war. An announcement on a Hamas radio station gave Fatah until 2 p.m. (1100 GMT) to pull security men out of the military intelligence, presidential guard, national security and preventive security facilities. There was no immediate response from Fatah, whose gunmen have been locked in a new surge of fighting with Hamas that has brought civil war closer and killed at least 20 people since Saturday. The battles reflect a raging power struggle between Hamas and secular Fatah, partners in a three-month-old unity government. Arab unity, one of my favorite oxymorons. In fresh flareups, gunmen fired at the home of Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas and the office of President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah. No one was hurt. Thats too bad. The big shots need a chance to bleed just like the little people. Hamas gunmen swept into Fatah posts across the coastal territory, capturing some in battles and others without a fight, local residents said, describing the northern and central Gaza Strip as largely under the Islamist group's control. The attacks followed fighting on Monday in which at least 14 people were killed. The violence, described by Gazans as more brutal than in the past, has included a shootout in a hospital, dropping foes to their deaths from high-rise buildings and the execution-style slaying of a Fatah field commander outside his home. "COUP" A spokesman for Abbas's office accused "a group within Hamas, in which some political and military leaders are participating, of plotting a coup" aimed at imposing sole Hamas control over the Gaza Strip. "The Palestinian presidency is worried about this plot...which is pushing the homeland into an ugly civil war," the spokesman said in a statement. "President Abbas is calling for an immediate ceasefire and to start a serious dialogue." Unlike what was supposed to pass for it in Mecca. Any more "serious dialogue" and these guys are gonna turn into French politicians. Palestinian analyst Ali al-Jarbawi said he expected the unity government formed in a bid to end internal violence and ease Western sanctions on the Hamas-led administration -- to remain in place. "It will be there, (but) it is incapable of doing its job. The situation will be completely paralyzed," Jarbawi said. Evoking a measure Israel uses to cordon off Palestinian areas in operations against militants, Hamas's armed wing declared northern Gaza and the centre of the territory, where six people were wounded in clashes, "closed military zones." "Stay at home and you will be safe," Hamas's Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades warned Fatah fighters in an announcement over a radio station, in a bid to prevent the rival faction from rushing reinforcements to battle scenes. Some 630 Palestinians have died in internal strife since Hamas came to power in 2006. Testimony to their incredibly crappy marksmanship. Whats that, one deader per every 1,000 rounds fired? Feh! In a widening of the conflict, Abbas's Presidential Guard seized equipment in an office of Hamas's al-Aqsa television in the West Bank city of Ramallah, a security source said. The station broadcasts from Gaza. Was it a white media jeep? Two gunmen, one from Hamas and the other from Fatah, were killed in fighting in the central Gaza Strip. Gunmen also abducted and then killed a member of Hamas's armed wing, a nephew of Abdel Aziz-Rantissi, a Hamas leader assassinated by Israel in 2004. Rantissi junior aint rantin no mo. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | ||
Paleos renew Trucefire, demand it include W.Bank | ||
2007-04-26 | ||
Hamas's Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades said its barrage was a response to the killing of nine Palestinians in Israeli military operations against militants, mostly in the West Bank. After security consultations on Wednesday, Olmert decided against launching a ground offensive in Gaza, Israeli political sources said. But in a statement, his office said Israel would not hesitate to attack rocket-firing squads. Anticipating Israeli military action, Hamas gunmen took up positions overnight near Gaza's border with Israel, covering themselves with tree branches as camouflage. "The Zionist enemy should understand that any thought of raiding the Gaza Strip will open the gates of hell and hundreds of rockets will be launched against (the southern Israeli towns) of Sderot and Ashkelon and beyond," said Qassam brigades spokesman Abu Ubaida, [who] also threatened to shoot down Israeli military aircraft flying over the Gaza Strip. Israel has signaled its interest in extending the Gaza truce to the West Bank but only if militant threats cease first. | ||
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas denies Israeli reports of smuggling Sagger missiles into Gaza |
2007-02-23 |
The military wing of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) on Thursday denied Israeli reports that it had obtained Soviet-made anti-tank missiles in Gaza. The denial came in response to a report by the Israeli Ha'aretz daily that Hamas militants smuggled Sagger missiles into Gaza from Egypt. But Abu Obaida, spokesman for Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, insisted that the Palestinian resistance have the right to get such missiles and more advanced rockets. It's a Legitimate Right™... He said that the brigades has been developing homemade weapons to fight against "the Zionist enemy which always announces intentions to launch wide aggression against the Gaza Strip." He said that Hamas militants have made progress in this regard, terming the progress as "a tangible development in Palestinian resistance." Israel and the Palestinians agreed on a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip last November. Hamas committed itself to the deal and stopped rocket attacks against southern Israel. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas ambushes Gaza "arms convoy" , Trucefire holding |
2007-02-01 |
When will it be time for the next one? GAZA (Reuters) - Hamas gunmen ambushed what the Islamic group alleged was a convoy carrying weapons to Mahmoud Abbas's presidential guard in the Gaza Strip on Thursday and at least one person was killed and 17 were wounded, residents said. The four-truck convoy, which set off from the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel, was stopped by gunfire in the central Gaza Strip. Must've skipped the weigh station... ![]() Oh, it was just a test. I guess the dead guy flunked. A battle raged between Hamas gunmen and presidential guards accompanying the convoy, according to residents in the area who said a civilian was killed. Hospital officials said 17 people, including two children, were wounded in the clash. "A real war is taking place, gunmen are using the heaviest arms they have," a witness said. Hope this doesn't "derail talks on the unity government"... Sources in the governing Hamas movement said the trucks were carrying weapons for the 4,000-man presidential guard, a force loyal to Abbas and his Fatah faction. Oh, boy! New guns! "Hamas's heroes have commandeered arms shipments that came through Kerem Shalom as part of the fight against the Palestinian people," a presenter on a Hamas radio station said. Ha! Now they're our guns! NYAH NYAH, NYAH NYAH... Asked about the convoy's cargo, a Palestinian security official declined to comment. A senior Israeli official said she knew trucks had entered the Gaza Strip but did not know their contents. Ummmmmmmmm...trucks? What trucks? Oh, those trucks. President Bush has committed $86 million to provide training and non-lethal equipment to forces loyal to Abbas. Guns and ammunition are being supplied by key U.S. allies Jordan and Egypt, with Israeli approval, Israeli officials say. Thanks, George. Let me know how much of it was mine, and I'll just flush it down the toilet. Diplomats say Abbas's military build-up was meant to counter strides by Hamas in smuggling in more powerful weapons into Gaza for its fast-growing "Executive Force" and armed wing, known as the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades. Mahmoud, is that an AK-47? No, it's an AK...48. Next week, we get AK...49s. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
And in this corner: How Fatah and Hamas Militarily Stack Up |
2006-12-17 |
[Dr. Aaron Lerner - IMRA: In addition to the 75,000 armed Palestinians drawing salaries in the PA as reported below there are large groups in the Fatah militias as well as other illegal Palestinian militias.] Dec 17 (Reuters) - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah has called for early elections, stoking fears of civil war between Fatah's forces and those loyal to the ruling Hamas faction. Here's how the rivals stack up militarily: ABBAS'S PRESIDENTIAL GUARD With U.S. backing, Abbas's elite presidential guard has grown to at least 4,000 men, up from 2,500 members when Hamas took power in March. Last week, Hamas accused the presidential guard and a Fatah strongman of trying to assassinate Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh as his convoy was leaving the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt. Fatah denies the charge. U.S. plans call for expanding the presidential guard to at least 4,700 members in the near term. Palestinian officials say the force would eventually grow to at least 10,000 members. The United States and Israel have also backed a proposal by Abbas to let about 1,000 members of the so-called Badr Brigade, a Fatah-dominated force based in Jordan, into the Palestinian territories to reinforce Abbas's guard. Under U.S. guidance, European states have committed non-lethal equipment, including vehicles, to the presidential guard. Washington has also helped organise shipments of guns and ammunition to the guard from Egypt and Jordan. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said last week that the Bush administration, pending U.S. congressional approval, would provide tens of millions of dollars in direct support to strengthen Abbas's forces. ABBAS'S GENERAL INTELLIGENCE AND NATIONAL SECURITY FORCES Under Abbas's control, General Intelligence is believed to have 5,000 members. Fatah has accused Hamas of killing several of the unit's leaders in the Gaza Strip in recent months. The killing a week ago of three schoolboys, whose father was an intelligence official considered close to Abbas, deepened the divide between Fatah and Hamas. Hamas denies involvement. National Security Forces under Abbas's direct command include Military Intelligence and the Naval Police. They are not as well equipped as the presidential guard but are believed to have up to 30,000 members in all. HAMAS'S EXECUTIVE FORCE First deployed by the Hamas-led government on the streets of Gaza in May, Hamas says its "Executive Force" has grown from an estimated 3,000 members to nearly 6,000. The force is built mostly from members of the Hamas armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, but it includes some members from allied militant factions such as the Popular Resistance Committees. The force appears to be well equipped using the group's own resources. Israel and the United States believe Iran has provided tens of millions of dollars in support to bolster the force. Hamas does not provide any information about the force's sources of funding. PALESTINIAN POLICE AND PREVENTIVE SECURITY In theory, these fall under the jurisdiction of the Hamas-controlled Interior Ministry. But in practice, they are dominated by loyalists of Abbas's Fatah movement and Hamas has struggled to exert control over them. Their total strength is estimated at about 30,000. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |
Israeli troops kill three Palestinian gunmen | |
2006-08-19 | |
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Three Palestinian militants from the armed wing of the governing Hamas Islamist group died in the West Bank city of Jenin on Friday while they were preparing a bomb, local security officials said. The Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades described the men as engineers, the term it uses for bomb-makers. | |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Hamas denies Israeli soldier to be freed soon |
2006-07-28 |
![]() "Nothing has changed in the case of the Israeli soldier," said Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades. "The file remains in the hands of the resistance factions and not in the hands of any politician even if that politician is Abu Mazen," Ubaida said, using Abbas's nickname. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israel calls Hizbollah capture of soldiers act of war (summary as of 1:16 pm Eastern Time) |
2006-07-12 |
1:16 PM (ET) QASMIYEH, Lebanon (Reuters) - Hizbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed at least seven on Wednesday in what Israel described as an act of war by Lebanon that would draw a "very painful" response. The sources said the Israeli soldiers had been seized at around 9 a.m. (0600 GMT) across the border from Aita al-Shaab, some 15 km (nine miles) from the Mediterranean coast. Hizbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said the two soldiers had been seized to force Israel to release prisoners. "What we did today ... is the only feasible path to free detainees from Israeli jails," he told a news conference in Beirut, proposing "indirect" negotiations, not confrontation. He said the operation had been in the works for five months. The Shi'ite movement has made two previous failed attempts to catch Israeli soldiers for a prisoner swap in less than a year. Hizbollah's bold cross-border attack returned it to the frontline of the Middle East conflict. It inflicted the heaviest losses Israel has suffered on its northern border since it withdrew from south Lebanon in 2000, and drew Prime Minister Ehud Olmert into a second crisis over captured Israeli soldiers. Lebanese civilians braced for Israeli bombs, but many people in the mainly Shi'ite south expressed defiance. "The resistance has given us a balance of power and Israel will pay the price for any retaliation," said Hussein Mohammed, 55. Two Lebanese civilians were killed in an Israeli air raid on a coastal bridge at Qasmiyeh. Bombs hit eight other bridges in the south and 16 Lebanese were wounded, security sources said. The Israeli army confirmed that two Israeli soldiers had been captured and at least seven killed on the Lebanese frontier. A military source said the toll could rise. Hizbollah supporters set off firecrackers and distributed sweets in the streets of Beirut in celebration. Israeli ground forces crossed into Lebanon to hunt for the missing soldiers, Israeli Army Radio said. Nasrallah said Hizbollah fighters had repelled the incursion. Nasrallah said one Hizbollah fighter was killed in Israeli air raids, along with several civilians. Nasrallah said the Israeli captives were in a secure place, but gave no details on their condition. Traffic was thin on roads in the south amid sporadic Israeli shelling of border areas. An Israeli rocket hit a car carrying a crew from Lebanese New Television, wounding all three. Israeli troops have not struck deep into Lebanon since they withdrew six years ago after an 18-year war of attrition by Syrian- and Iranian-backed Hizbollah fighters. "It is an act of war by the state of Lebanon against the state of Israel in its sovereign territory," Olmert said of Hizbollah's action, threatening a "very painful" response. In 2004, Hizbollah swapped a kidnapped Israeli businessman and the bodies of three Israeli soldiers for more than 420 Arab prisoners after German mediation. Germany said on Wednesday it was contacting Middle Eastern capitals about the two captured Israeli soldiers, but declined to say if it was prepared to mediate again. Hizbollah, the only Lebanese faction to retain its weapons after the 1975-90 civil war, is also a political party with 14 members in the Beirut parliament and two cabinet ministers. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan led widespread international calls for Hizbollah to free the captured Israelis. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice condemned the Hizbollah attack, urged all sides to show restraint and asked Syria "to use its influence to support a positive outcome." In Gaza, Israel killed nine members of a Palestinian family in an air strike that destroyed a three-storey residential building where top Hamas commanders were believed to be meeting. The bombing was among a series of attacks that killed a total of 22 Palestinians as Israeli forces swept into central Gaza on Wednesday, broadening an offensive aimed at freeing a captured soldier and halting cross-border rocket fire. The Israeli military said the air raid wounded Mohammad Deif, leader of the governing Hamas's armed wing. A spokesman for Hamas's Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades denied Deif was hurt. Israel's ground campaign in Gaza, the first since it left the territory last year, has killed about 78 Palestinians. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israel eyes wider Gaza sweep after Hamas rocket hits |
2006-07-05 |
![]() An upgraded Qassam rocket, powered by two engines instead of the usual single motor, and flying 12 km (7 miles), slammed into a school yard in the coastal city of Ashkelon, the army said. The attack in the centre of Ashkelon, a city of about 115,000 and the site of one of Israel's main power plants, caused no injuries. But Olmert made clear the rocket had crossed a red line, even after gunmen from Hamas and two other groups stunned Israel by abducting Corporal Gilad Shalit in a cross-border raid launched from Gaza on June 25. "This is an escalation without precedent in the terrorist war waged by the Hamas movement that now controls the Palestinian Authority," Olmert said in a speech at a U.S. Independence Day celebration at the American ambassador's house. "This (rocket) attack ... will have unprecedented, far-reaching consequences. The Hamas organisation will be the first to feel them," he said, after its Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades claimed responsibility for the strike. |
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