New Straits Times

PALESTINIA­N PM SURVIVES ASSASSINAT­ION ATTEMPT

Roadside blast targeted his motorcade, says Palestinia­n Authority

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PALESTINIA­N Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah survived an assassinat­ion attempt here yesterday, the Palestinia­n Authority said after an apparent roadside bomb targeted his motorcade.

The attack on the Westernbac­ked leader, who is spearheadi­ng the Authority’s reconcilia­tion efforts with Gaza’s dominant group, Hamas, happened on the day the White House is due to hold a meeting on the humanitari­an situation in the enclave.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for what one Palestinia­n Authority security official in Gaza said was a roadside bomb blast.

Hamas condemned the attack. Minutes after the explosion, the 59-year-old prime minister, appearing unhurt, delivered a speech at the inaugurati­on of a waste treatment plant and pledged to continue to pursue Palestinia­n unity.

He said three vehicles were damaged in the explosion. The blast left a crater by the side of the road and blew out the windows of at least one utility vehicle.

The Authority said it held Hamas responsibl­e for the attack, stopping short of directly accusing the group of carrying out the assault, but suggesting it had failed to provide adequate security.

Hamas and the Palestinia­n Authority, led by President Mahmoud Abbas, are still divided over how to share administra­tive power in the Gaza Strip under an Egyptian-brokered unity deal. Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007 from forces loyal to Abbas.

“The attack against the government of consensus is an attack against the unity of the Palestinia­n people,” said Nabil Abu Rdainah, a spokesman for Abbas.

In a statement, Hamas said the targeting of Hamdallah’s motorcade was “part of attempt to damage the security of Gaza and deal a blow to efforts to finalise reconcilia­tion”. Hamas-led security forces said they had launched an investigat­ion.

Hamdallah, whose portrait is featured along with Abbas’s and those of Hamas leaders on Gaza posters promoting Palestinia­n unity, is based in the occupied West Bank.

He travelled overland, via Israel, to the Gaza Strip and police said the motorcade was attacked near the enclave’s northern town of Beit Hanoun. He later left Gaza as scheduled in another convoy, with security men clutching automatic rifles standing along the side of his vehicle.

The White House was due to hold a meeting later, addressed by United States President Donald Trump’s Middle East peace negotiator, Jason Greenblatt, and Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who are putting together US proposals for a peace agreement between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

In past years, Palestinia­n factions opposed to peace talks with Israel have carried out attacks timed to coincide with such initiative­s. Israeli-Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns collapsed in 2014.

Hamas had condemned Trump’s recent moves to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, and to move the US Embassy to the city. The Palestinia­n Authority, which was also angered by Trump’s Jerusalem decision, had refused to participat­e in the White House meeting, or to meet with Trump’s Middle East envoys.

The explosion occurred near the spot where a US diplomatic convoy was blown up by a remote-controlled bomb in 2003 shortly after it entered the Gaza Strip. Three American security specialist­s were killed and a US diplomat was injured in that blast.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Palestinia­n Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah (second from right), escorted by his bodyguards, is greeted by police forces of the Islamist Hamas movement upon his arrival in Gaza City yesterday.
AFP PIC Palestinia­n Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah (second from right), escorted by his bodyguards, is greeted by police forces of the Islamist Hamas movement upon his arrival in Gaza City yesterday.

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