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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

'Hamas and Iran don't want regional war, but a crime should be punished'

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei meets with Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran on Tuesday the day before he was killed. — AFP
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei meets with Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran on Tuesday the day before he was killed. — AFP
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DUBAI/CAIRO: Hamas and Iran don't want a regional war, but there is a crime that should be punished, Hamas deputy chief in Gaza Khalil Al Hayya said in a press conference in Tehran after the killing of the Palestinian militant group's chief Ismail Haniyeh. The assassination strips the Palestinian group of one of its sharpest political minds but will have no bearing on the leadership of the military wing that Israel is trying to destroy in Gaza.


Hamas has several possible candidates to replace Haniyeh, notably Khaled Meshaal, the group's former leader who survived an Israeli assassination attempt in Jordan in 1997 and resides today in Qatar.


Whoever emerges, experts say it won't impact the way Hamas runs its war against Israel in the Gaza Strip, where leaders including Yahya Sinwar have been directing operations with a significant degree of autonomy during the conflict.


For Hamas leaders based outside the Palestinian territories, the assassination in Tehran indicates heightened risks. Haniyeh was the second Hamas leader killed in a Middle East capital this year, following a drone strike that took out the group's deputy leader — Saleh al Arouri — in Beirut in January.


Israel has achieved mixed results in trying to kill the Gaza-based commanders responsible for planning and executing the cross-border Oct. 7 attack.


In March, Israel said it had killed Marwan Issa, the deputy military commander of the Hamas armed wing known as Al Qassam Brigades. The United States confirmed Issa's death in an Israeli operation. Hamas has neither confirmed nor denied his death.


In July, an Israeli attempt in Gaza to kill Mohammed Deif — head of the Qassam Brigades and believed to be one of the masterminds of Oct. 7 — resulted in scores of Palestinian dead but no confirmation he was among them.


Israel has said there are increasing signs that Deif was killed in the strike but has yet to confirm whether he is dead. It has accused Hamas of hiding the truth about his fate.


Qatar-based senior Hamas official Khalil Al-Hayya has denied that Deif was killed.


The other mastermind of the Oct. 7 attack, Sinwar, is still believed to be directing military operations, possibly from bunkers beneath Gaza, while playing a leading role in indirect negotiations with Israel for a prisoner swap deal.


"Assassinations don't impact Hamas," a source close to the Islamist militant group told Reuters from Gaza, declining to be identified due to the sensitivity of the subject.


"Fighters on the ground have their own orders, they are bound to fight until Sinwar and the leadership tell them there is a deal in place," the source said.


Haniyeh was appointed to the top leadership role in 2017.


Sami Abu Zuhri, a senior Hamas official located outside the Palestinian territories, said Israel assassinated Haniyeh because they had failed to defeat the Iran-backed group in Gaza, calling it an attempt to portray "a fake victory".


He noted Hamas had weathered numerous assassinations over the years, including Sheikh Ahmed Yassin - Hamas' co-founder and spiritual leader - who was killed in a helicopter missile strike in 2004 as he left a mosque in Gaza City.


"Hamas is a movement of institutions, it doesn't die when its leaders die," Abu Zuhri told Reuters.


Hamas was founded in 1987 as the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist movement that has drawn followers across the Arab world since being established in Egypt in 1928.


Ashraf Abouelhoul, a specialist on Palestinian issues and managing editor of the Egyptian state-owned paper Al-Ahram, said Hamas had other veteran politicians such as Meshaal to fall back on. "He is set to have a big role," he said.


But on the military front, nothing would change.


"Haniyeh had no role when it comes to the military aspect. (That) is up to the military leaders in Gaza," he said. — Reuters


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