Cape Argus

Israel dismisses assassin claims

-

JERUSALEM: Israel’s defence minister said yesterday that a Palestinia­n scientist shot dead in Malaysia was a rocket expert and “no saint”, but dismissed suggestion­s by Hamas that Israel’s Mossad spy agency assassinat­ed him.

Two men on a motorcycle fired 10 shots at Fadi al-Batsh, an engineerin­g lecturer, in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, killing him on the spot, the city’s police chief, Mazlan Lazim said.

Hamas, an Islamist militant group that rules the Gaza Strip, said one of its members had been assassinat­ed in Malaysia. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said Mossad had been behind past attempts to kill Palestinia­n scientists, and the attack on Batsh “follows this sequence”.

Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said it was likely that Batsh was killed as part of an internal Palestinia­n dispute.

“We heard about it in the news. The terrorist organisati­ons blame every assassinat­ion on Israel – we’re used to that,” Lieberman said.

“The man was no saint and he didn’t deal with improving infrastruc­ture in Gaza – he was involved in improving rockets’ accuracy… We constantly see a settling of accounts between various factions in the terrorist organisati­ons and I suppose that is what happened in this case.”

Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said on Saturday that the suspects in the killing, who fled the scene, were believed to be Europeans with links to a foreign intelligen­ce agency, state news agency Bernama reported.

He added that Batsh was active in pro-Palestinia­n non-government­al organisati­ons, describing him as an expert in electrical engineerin­g and rocket building.

He could have been seen as “a liability for a country that is an enemy of Palestine”, Zahid said.

Malaysian police chief Mohamad Fuzi Bin Harun said yesterday that no arrests had been made.

Batsh was a lecturer at Universiti Kuala Lumpur, specialisi­ng in power engineerin­g, according to the university.

Batsh’s uncle Jamal al-Batsh, speaking to Reuters in the Gaza Strip, said he believed Mossad was behind the killing because “Israel knows Palestine will be liberated by scientists”.

Hamas, which advocates Israel’s destructio­n, fired thousands of rockets at Israel, most of them intercepte­d by an anti-missile system, during a 2014 Gaza war that included devastatin­g Israeli attacks in the enclave of two million Palestinia­ns.

In recent weeks, tensions have been running high at the Gaza-Israel border as Palestinia­ns have ramped up protests demanding the right to return to homes that are now in Israel.

Israel’s use of live fire, killing at least 35 Palestinia­ns, has drawn internatio­nal criticism. Israel says it is protecting its borders and takes such action when protesters come too close to the border fence. – Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa