Palestinian Authority Underlines Need to Disarm Hamas

Palestinian Police Chief Major General Hazem Atallah speaks to reporters during a news conference in Ramallah on Wednesday. (Reuters)
Palestinian Police Chief Major General Hazem Atallah speaks to reporters during a news conference in Ramallah on Wednesday. (Reuters)
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Palestinian Authority Underlines Need to Disarm Hamas

Palestinian Police Chief Major General Hazem Atallah speaks to reporters during a news conference in Ramallah on Wednesday. (Reuters)
Palestinian Police Chief Major General Hazem Atallah speaks to reporters during a news conference in Ramallah on Wednesday. (Reuters)

The Palestinian Authority insisted on disarming Hamas in the Gaza Strip in order to make reconciliation on the basis of “one weapon and one law”, while announcing the return of security coordination with Israel.

Palestinian Police Chief Major General Hazem Atallah told reporters on Wednesday that Hamas must disarm, saying: “We are talking about one authority, one law, one gun.”

This was the first public and official statement by the PA calling for Hamas’ disarmament. Palestinian officials have previously referred to the need to control and neutralize weapons, but the disarmament file was not discussed between Fatah and Hamas in the Cairo negotiations last month.

Asked whether Hamas’ Qassam Brigade would be able to maintain its weapons, the police chief replied: “No way… It is impossible. How can I do security when there are all these rockets and guns and whatever? Is this possible? It does not work.”

Hamas did not immediately respond to Atallah’s remarks, but its leader in the Gaza Strip, Yehya al-Senwar has repeatedly called the movement’s disarmament a “devil’s dream in paradise.”

The Qassam Brigade is very powerful in the Gaza Strip and has a large number of fighters, weapons and rockets. The brigade engaged in three major confrontations with Israel within 10 years. 

The Palestinian police chief also said in a press conference that security coordination with the Israeli side was resumed around two weeks ago following a partial suspension in July.

“Security coordination between Palestinian and Israeli services have resumed as it used to be before it was halted,” adding that he was referring to joint efforts to prevent militant attacks, as crime-fighting police cooperation between the sides had never stopped.

In July, President Mahmoud Abbas announced the suspension of security coordination in protest of Israel’s construction of metal gates at the entrances to Al-Aqsa Mosque, after two Israeli policemen were killed in Haram al-Sharif courtyards where police had chased and killed three Palestinian suicide bombers.

“We don’t work for politics. We work for people,” Atallah stated.



Israeli Forces Storm Major West Bank City of Nablus

Tear gas and smoke are pictured through a window during a large-scale Israeli military raid in the old town of Nablus city in the occupied West Bank, on June 10, 2025. (AFP)
Tear gas and smoke are pictured through a window during a large-scale Israeli military raid in the old town of Nablus city in the occupied West Bank, on June 10, 2025. (AFP)
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Israeli Forces Storm Major West Bank City of Nablus

Tear gas and smoke are pictured through a window during a large-scale Israeli military raid in the old town of Nablus city in the occupied West Bank, on June 10, 2025. (AFP)
Tear gas and smoke are pictured through a window during a large-scale Israeli military raid in the old town of Nablus city in the occupied West Bank, on June 10, 2025. (AFP)

Israel launched a large-scale military operation on Tuesday in the old city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank, AFP journalists reported, with the army reporting injured troops and two Palestinians "eliminated".

Dozens of military vehicles entered the city shortly after midnight, an AFP journalist reported, after a curfew had been announced over loudspeakers the day before.

Military operations are focused on the old city, a densely populated area bordering a large downtown square where young men and boys gathered to burn tires and throw stones at armored vehicles.

The Israeli army said that one soldier was "moderately injured" and three others "lightly injured" when two Palestinians attempted to steal a soldier's weapon.

Troops opened fire and "eliminated" both Palestinians, the army said in a statement, using a term the military often uses when killing gunmen.

AFPTV footage showed Israeli soldiers standing in one of the old city's narrow streets, next to the bodies of two civilians.

Neither Palestinian medics nor the Israeli army confirmed the two deaths.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said on Tuesday that three people were injured from bullet shrapnel, four from "physical assaults", and dozens more from tear gas inhalation.

It added that many injuries had to be handled within the old city after its ambulances were blocked from entering.

Nablus is located in the northern West Bank, a Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967.

The territory's north has been the target of a major Israeli military operation dubbed "Iron Wall" since January 21.

On Tuesday, Israeli soldiers entered shops to search them and arrested several people for questioning, according to an AFP correspondent at the scene.

The correspondent added that Israeli flags were raised over the roofs of buildings in the Old City that had been turned into temporary bases for Israeli troops.

Violence has surged in the West Bank since the start of the Gaza war, triggered by the unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack by the Palestinian movement Hamas on Israel.

At least 938 Palestinians, including fighters but also many civilians, have been killed in the West Bank by Israeli soldiers or settlers, according to data from the Palestinian Authority.

During the same period, least 35 Israelis, both civilians and soldiers, have been killed in Palestinian attacks or during Israeli military raids, according to official Israeli figures.