Netanyahu says Israel killed Hamas Gaza chief Mohammed Sinwar
Mohammed Sinwar was born in 1975 in the urban Khan Younis refugee camp. His family was among hundreds of thousands of Palestinians driven from what is now Israel during the 1948 war surrounding its creation.
PTI
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Mohammed Sinwar was one of the planners of a 2006 cross-border attack on an Israeli army post
Cairo, 28 May
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
on Wednesday that Mohammed Sinwar, believed to be the head of Hamas' armed
wing, has been killed, apparently confirming his death in a recent strike in
the Gaza Strip. There was no confirmation from Hamas.
Sinwar is the younger brother of Yahya Sinwar,
the Hamas leader who helped mastermind the 7 October, 2023, attack that started
the Israel-Hamas war, and who was killed by Israeli forces in October 2024.
Israeli strikes have decimated Hamas'
leadership during the 19-month war, and Mohammed Sinwar was one of the last
widely known leaders still alive in Gaza. But the militant group has maintained
its rule over the parts of Gaza not seized by Israel. It still holds dozens of
hostages and carries out sporadic attacks on Israeli forces.
As the head of Hamas' armed wing, Sinwar would
have had the final word on any agreement to release the hostages, and his death
could further complicate US and Arab efforts to broker a ceasefire. Israel has
vowed to continue the war until all the hostages are returned and Hamas has
been either defeated or disarmed and sent into exile.
Mentioned in passing
Netanyahu mentioned the killing of Sinwar in a speech before parliament in which he listed the names of other top Hamas leaders killed during the war. “We have killed ten of thousands of terrorists. We killed (Mohammed) Deif, (Ismail) Haniyeh, Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Sinwar,” he said.
Netanyahu did not elaborate. Israeli media had
reported that the younger Sinwar was the target of a 13 May strike on what the
military said was a Hamas command centre beneath the European Hospital in the
southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, the Sinwars' hometown.
The military declined to comment on whether
Sinwar had been targeted or killed.
At least six people were killed in the strike
and 40 wounded, Gaza's Health Ministry said at the time.
A Hamas veteran
Mohammed Sinwar was born in 1975 in the urban Khan Younis refugee camp. His family was among hundreds of thousands of Palestinians driven from what is now Israel during the 1948 war surrounding its creation. The refugees and their descendants today make up the majority of Gaza's population.
Like his older brother, Yahya, the younger
Sinwar joined Hamas after it was founded in the late 1980s as the Palestinian
branch of the Muslim Brotherhood. He became a member of the group's military
wing, known as the Qassam Brigades.
He rose through the ranks to become a member
of its so-called joint chiefs of staff, bringing him close to its longtime
commander, Deif, who was killed in a strike last year.
Mohammed Sinwar was one of the planners of a
2006 cross-border attack on an Israeli army post. In that attack, militants
captured Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit, who was held for five years and later
exchanged for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, including Yahya Sinwar.
In an interview with Qatar's Al Jazeera TV
aired three years ago, Mohammed Sinwar said that when Hamas threatens Israel,
“we know how to specify the location that hurts the occupation and how to press
them.”
Hamas has said that Mohammed Sinwar was
targeted by Israel on several occasions and was briefly believed to have been
killed in 2014. He is said to have been one of a handful of top commanders who
knew about the October 7 attack in advance.
In December 2023, the Israeli military
released a video it said showed a bearded Mohammed Sinwar sitting next to a
driver in a car as it moved inside a tunnel in the Gaza Strip. Hamas never
confirmed what would be one of the few public images of him.
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