Abbas Accuses Hamas of Involvement in Hamdallah Assassination Attempt

President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the leadership meeting in Ramallah. (WAFA / Usama Falah)
President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the leadership meeting in Ramallah. (WAFA / Usama Falah)
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Abbas Accuses Hamas of Involvement in Hamdallah Assassination Attempt

President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the leadership meeting in Ramallah. (WAFA / Usama Falah)
President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the leadership meeting in Ramallah. (WAFA / Usama Falah)

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas accused on Monday the Hamas Movement of being involved in the assassination attempt that targeted the convoy of Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and head of intelligence Majid Faraj last week in the Gaza Strip.

“We know that they, Hamas, are behind it," the President said at the start of the leadership meeting in Ramallah on Monday.

Abbas said he would take national, legal and financial measures to protect out the national project.

"We never thought of punishing any Palestinian citizen, not in the West Bank or Gaza. But we have to say where the wrong is and where the crime is. This situation is not acceptable,” he said.

Last Tuesday, the prime minister and Faraj’s convoy came under attack after entering Gaza when Hamdallah was on his way to attend the inauguration of a wastewater treatment plant in the Gaza Strip.

Hamdallah and Faraj were not hurt. However, seven people from the prime minister’s bodyguards were lightly injured in the explosion.

"There aren't two sides to the division, rather only one side that is consolidating it and enforces an illegal de facto situation," said Abbas, adding that the outcome of the reconciliation talks is the attempt to assassinate Hamdallah and Faraj.

The Palestinian President also said that either the Palestinian government takes full charge of everything in Gaza, or the de facto authority remains fully responsible for it.

“We have been working hard for six months and got nothing, not the government, not the crossings, not security, nothing. It's all hypocrisy. They don't want reconciliation," he added.

However, the Hamas Movement on Monday rejected Abbas’ accusations, and said the Palestinian President was working to “undermine the prospects of advancing the Palestinian national project and achieving national unity.”



French Prosecutors Seek New Arrest Warrant against Bashar Assad

A bullet-riddled portrait of Syria's Bashar al-Assad adorns Hama's municipality following the city's capture by opposition forces on December 6, 2024. (AFP)
A bullet-riddled portrait of Syria's Bashar al-Assad adorns Hama's municipality following the city's capture by opposition forces on December 6, 2024. (AFP)
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French Prosecutors Seek New Arrest Warrant against Bashar Assad

A bullet-riddled portrait of Syria's Bashar al-Assad adorns Hama's municipality following the city's capture by opposition forces on December 6, 2024. (AFP)
A bullet-riddled portrait of Syria's Bashar al-Assad adorns Hama's municipality following the city's capture by opposition forces on December 6, 2024. (AFP)

French prosecutors said Monday they have requested a new arrest warrant against Syria's ousted President Bashar al-Assad over a deadly 2013 chemical attacks after a previous one was cancelled, AFP reported.

It is now up to investigating magistrates to decide whether to issue the new warrant.

French investigators have since 2021 been looking into a suspected Syrian government sarin gas attack that killed more than 1,000 people, according to US intelligence, on August 4 and 5, 2013, in the areas of Adra and Douma outside Damascus.

The Court of Cassation, France’s highest court, on Friday ruled there were no exceptions to presidential immunity, even for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, annulling a French warrant against Assad issued in 2023 when he was still leader.

It however added that, as Assad, who was toppled in December, was no longer president, new warrants could be issued and the French investigation could continue.

In November 2023, the French judiciary issued an arrest warrant against Assad on charges of complicity in crimes against humanity and war crimes, in connection with the chemical attacks attributed to the Syrian government under his rule.

The French judiciary tackled the case under the principle of universal jurisdiction, whereby a court may prosecute individuals for serious crimes committed in other countries.

An investigation – based on testimonies of survivors and military defectors, as well as photos and video footage – led to warrants for the arrest of Assad, his brother Maher – then head of the Syrian army's fourth division – and two generals, Ghassan Abbas and Bassam al-Hassan.

Public prosecutors approved three of the warrants, but issued an appeal against the one targeting Assad, arguing he should have immunity as a head of state.

The Paris Court of Appeal in June last year however upheld it, and prosecutors again appealed.

Assad and his family fled to Russia, according to Russian authorities, after opposition fighters seized power on December 8.

Another French warrant is already out for Assad's arrest, issued in January for suspected complicity in war crimes for a bombing in the Syrian city of Daraa in 2017 that killed a French-Syrian civilian.