GAZA – Hamas security forces in Gaza stormed a building where killers of a pro-Palestinian Italian activist were hiding yesterday and two of the al-Qaeda-inspired fugitives died in the raid, Hamas said.
The Hamas-run government said one of the dead militants, a Jordanian, had shot himself after throwing a grenade that killed the second as the security forces burst into the building in the central Gaza Strip where the fugitives had been hiding.
Three members of the Hamas security forces were also wounded in the battle to capture Vittorio Arrigoni’s killers, part of a jihadist Salafist group which had abducted the Italian to press their demand for Hamas to release their jailed leader. Mr Arrigoni was kidnapped last Thursday and found strangled on Friday.
Another of the main suspects in his killing was captured alive, together with three group members who had been in the building at the time but were not identified as culprits. Hamas security forces had surrounded the four-storey building in the Nuseirat refugee camp earlier in the day, cordoned off the area and traded gunfire with the militants holed up inside.
An attempt to negotiate their surrender failed. At least four explosions and heavy gunfire were heard by witnesses as the Hamas security forces stormed the building.
The militants were jihadist Salafists who espouse a more radical form of political Islam than Hamas and appear to be attracting recruits, some from Hamas ranks.
Mr Arrigoni’s killing posed an unprecedented challenge to Hamas, which has governed Gaza since it seized control of the coastal territory from forces loyal to US-backed Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in 2007.
“Vittorio’s killing was meant to show Hamas was not in full control of the security situation and therefore the speed of action against the group was meant to show that they are still in control,” said Hani Habib, a political analyst. “Hamas was enthusiastic about catching or killing this group and they did not spare any effort to do so,” he said.
Mr Arrigoni’s death caused outrage among ordinary Palestinians in Gaza. He was known for helping local fishermen and farmers.
Mr Arrigoni (36) had lived in Gaza since arriving in 2008 aboard a humanitarian aid boat that Israel had admitted despite imposing a blockade on the coastal territory. – (Reuters)