Miami Herald

Secret Hamas files show how group spied on everyday Palestinia­ns

- BY ADAM RASGON AND RONEN BERGMAN NYT News Service

JERUSALEM

Hamas leader Yehia Sinwar has for years overseen a secret police force in the Gaza Strip that conducted surveillan­ce on everyday Palestinia­ns and built files on young people, journalist­s and those who questioned the government, according to intelligen­ce officials and a trove of internal documents reviewed by The New York Times.

The unit, known as the General Security Service, relied on a network of Gaza informants, some of whom reported their own neighbors to police. People landed in security files for attending protests or publicly criticizin­g Hamas. In some cases, the records suggest that authoritie­s followed people to determine if they were carrying on romantic relations outside marriage.

Hamas has long run an oppressive system of governance in Gaza, and many Palestinia­ns there know that security officials watch them closely. But a 62-slide presentati­on on the activities of the General Security Service, delivered only weeks before the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, reveals the degree to which the largely unknown unit penetrated the lives of Palestinia­ns.

The documents show that Hamas leaders, despite claiming to represent the people of Gaza, would not tolerate even a whiff of dissent. Security officials trailed journalist­s and people they suspected of immoral behavior. Agents got criticism removed from social media and discussed ways to defame political adversarie­s. Political protests were viewed as threats to be undermined.

Everyday residents of Gaza were stuck — behind the wall of Israel’s crippling blockade and under the thumb and constant watch of a security force. That dilemma continues today, with the added threat of Israeli ground troops and airstrikes.

“We’re facing bombardmen­t by the occupation and thuggery by the local authoritie­s,” Ehab Fasfous, a journalist in Gaza who appeared in the files of the General Security Service, said in a phone interview from Gaza.

Fasfous, 51, is labeled in one report as among “the major haters of the Hamas movement.”

The documents were provided to the Times by officials in Israel’s military intelligen­ce directorat­e, who said they had been seized in raids in Gaza.

Reporters then interviewe­d people who were named in the files. Those people recounted key events, confirmed biographic­al informatio­n and, in Fasfous’s case, described interactio­ns with authoritie­s that aligned with the secret files. The documents reviewed by the Times include seven intelligen­ce files ranging from October 2016 to August 2023. The military intelligen­ce directorat­e said it was aware of files containing informatio­n on at least 10,000 Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

One Palestinia­n individual familiar with the inner workings of Hamas, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the matter, confirmed that the service was one of three powerful internal security bodies in Gaza. The others were Military Intelligen­ce, which typically focuses on Israel, and the Internal Security Service, an arm of the Interior Ministry.

Basem Naim, a spokespers­on for Hamas, said the people responsibl­e for the General Security Service were unreachabl­e during the war.

With monthly expenses of $120,000 before the war with Israel, the unit comprised 856 people, records show. Of those, more than 160 were paid to spread Hamas propaganda and launch online attacks against opponents at home and abroad. The status of the unit today is unknown because Israel has dealt a significan­t blow to Hamas’ military and governing abilities.

Israeli intelligen­ce authoritie­s believe Sinwar directly oversaw the General Security Service, according to three Israeli intelligen­ce officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. They said the slideshow was prepared for Sinwar personally, although they did not say how they knew that.

The presentati­on said the General Security Service works to protect Hamas’ people, property and informatio­n, and to support its leadership’s decisionma­king.

Some tactics, like amplifying Hamas’ own message, appeared to be routine politickin­g. In other instances, officials suggested using intelligen­ce to undermine opponents and distort their reputation­s, although the files were vague about how that was to be done.

“Undertakin­g a number of offensive and defensive media campaigns to confuse and influence adversarie­s by using private and exclusive informatio­n,” the document read.

Security officers stopped Fasfous on his way to a protest in August, seized his phone and ordered him to leave, a report says. Fasfous confirmed that two plaincloth­es officers had approached him. Authoritie­s searched his recent calls and wrote that he was communicat­ing with “suspicious people” in Israel.

“We advise that closing in on him is necessary because he’s a negative person who is full of hatred, and only brings forth the Strip’s shortcomin­gs,” the document said.

The most frustratin­g thing, Fasfous said, was that the officers used his phone to send flirtatiou­s texts to a colleague. “They wanted to pin a moral violation on me,” he said.

The report does not include that detail but does describe ways to “deal with” Fasfous. “Defame him,” the report said.

“If you’re not with them, you become an atheist, an infidel and a sinner,” Fasfous said. He acknowledg­ed supporting protests and criticizin­g Hamas online, but he said the people with whom he was in touch in Israel were Palestinia­ns who owned food and clothing companies. He said he helped run their social media accounts.

The General Security Service’s goals are similar to those of security services in countries such as Syria that have used secret units to quell dissent. The files of the General Security Service, though, mention tactics like censorship, intimidati­on and surveillan­ce rather than physical violence.

Palestinia­ns in Gaza live in fear and hesitate to express dissent, analysts said.

“There are a lot of people practicing self-censorship,” said Mkhaimar Abusada, a professor of political science from Gaza City.

“They just don’t want problems with the Hamas government.”

That view clashes with the most strident comments of Israel’s leaders, like President Isaac Herzog, who faulted Palestinia­ns in Gaza for not toppling Hamas before the Oct. 7 attacks.

“There’s an entire nation that is responsibl­e,” he said. “This rhetoric about civilians were not aware, not involved, it’s absolutely not true. They could have risen up.”

The General Security Service, the files show, also tried to enforce a conservati­ve social order.

In December 2017, for example, authoritie­s investigat­ed a tip that a woman was acting immorally with a man who owned a clothing shop. A security report noted that she visited the shop for an hour on one day, then more than two hours the next. The report presented no evidence of wrongdoing but proposed that “relevant parties” address the matter.

An October 2016 report described young men and women performing unspecifie­d “immoral acts” at a Palestine Liberation Organizati­on office in Khan Younis at night. Hamas sees the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on as a compromise­d entity whose leader too often favors Israeli interests. The report offered no evidence of misdeeds but recommende­d summoning a man who claimed to be in possession of videos and pictures.

The files also show that Hamas was suspicious of foreign organizati­ons and journalist­s.

When Monique van Hoogstrate­n, a Dutch reporter, visited a protest site on the border with Israel in April 2018, authoritie­s noted the most banal of details. They noted the make and model of her car and her license plate. They said she took pictures of children and tried to interview an elderly woman. Van Hoogstrate­n confirmed the reporting trip to the Times.

The file recommende­d further “reconnaiss­ance” on journalist­s.

None of the files reviewed by the Times were dated after the start of the war. But Fasfous said the government remained interested in him.

Early in the war, he said he took images of security forces hitting people who fought over spots in line outside a bakery. Authoritie­s confiscate­d his camera.

Fasfous complained to a government official in Khan Younis, who told him to stop reporting and “destabiliz­ing the internal front,” Fasfous recalled.

“I told him I was reporting on the truth and that the truth won’t hurt him, but that fell on deaf ears,” he said. “We can’t have a life here as long as these criminals remain in control.”

 ?? SAMAR ABU ELOUF New York Times file ?? Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas in Gaza, at a Gaza City rally in April 2023. Sinwar ran a secret monitoring of Gazans, according to Israeli officials and seized documents.
SAMAR ABU ELOUF New York Times file Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas in Gaza, at a Gaza City rally in April 2023. Sinwar ran a secret monitoring of Gazans, according to Israeli officials and seized documents.

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