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Body of Mohammed Sinwar Identified
Body of Mohammed Sinwar Identified

Asharq Al-Awsat

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Body of Mohammed Sinwar Identified

Israeli authorities said on Sunday they identified the body of Hamas' military chief Mohammed al-Sinwar that was earlier retrieved from a tunnel underneath the European Hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, following a targeted operation last month. Al-Sinwar is the chief commander of Hamas's military wing and the younger brother of slain Hamas leader Yehya al-Sinwar. 'The body of al-Sinwar, is now in Israeli custody,' the Israeli army confirmed Sunday following a completed identification process, according to Yedioth Ahronoth. Authorities gave no further details about the other bodies found in the interconnected tunnel complex. Earlier, the Israeli Radio channel said the bodies of 10 other Palestinian Hamas members and leaders were recovered from the tunnel. The bodies were recovered during a special military operation. 'The Israeli military released footage showing the underground infrastructure beneath the hospital, including a command-and-control center reportedly used by senior Hamas commanders to direct combat operations,' Yedioth Ahronoth said. It added that the operation began last Wednesday evening. Prior to the raid, the hospital had been evacuated. Later, the government media office in Gaza denied the Israeli military claims that the tunnel was found beneath the European Hospital. The office said the video released by the Israeli army shows a narrow metal pipe that cannot fit a person, has no stairs or equipment and is located in an area used for rainwater drainage. It also said the Israeli forces dug the site themselves and staged the footage near the hospital's emergency department, which remains crowded with patients. On May 21, two Palestinian sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that al-Sinwar was killed alongside other Hamas figures in an Israeli airstrike on an underground tunnel near the European Hospital east of Khan Younis. One source said the bodies were moved from one tunnel to another for temporary burial. 'They were buried underground due to security concerns,' the source added. 'Hamas informed the families that the remains were not brought above ground and are expected to remain buried in the tunnels until the security situation allows for proper funerals,' the sources said. A second source told Asharq Al-Awsat that Qassam Brigades special units entered the collapsed tunnel after the bombing and recovered several bodies. The source said the method used to retrieve the bodies mirrored that of previous operations, including the recovery of senior Hamas officials Rawhi Mushtaha and Sameh al-Siraj, whose deaths were also confirmed posthumously.

Israeli minister says brother of al-Sinwar likely killed in Gaza
Israeli minister says brother of al-Sinwar likely killed in Gaza

Yahoo

time18-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Israeli minister says brother of al-Sinwar likely killed in Gaza

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz believes it is likely that the brother of late Hamas leader Yehya al-Sinwar was killed in an attack in the Gaza Strip a few days ago, according to media reports on Sunday. "Although there is no official confirmation yet, all indications are that Mohammed al-Sinwar has been eliminated," the news website ynet quoted Katz as saying at a committee meeting. Mohammed al-Sinwar is the younger brother of Yehya al-Sinwar, who is considered the mastermind behind the October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel and killed by the Israeli military in Gaza in October last year. He became head of Hamas' armed wing after the death of Mohammed Deif in July. Following an Israeli attack on a hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, Israeli media reported that the attack was aimed at Mohammed al-Sinwar, but officials had refused to comment. According to hospital reports, several people were killed in the strike. The Israeli military said it had conducted a "precise attack on Hamas terrorists in a command and control centre." According to an unconfirmed Arab media report, the body of Mohammed al-Sinwar was found in a tunnel in Khan Younis. The Israeli military was unable to confirm this when asked on Sunday morning.

Elusive Assassination Target, ‘Shadow Unit' Founder: Who Is Mohammed al-Sinwar?
Elusive Assassination Target, ‘Shadow Unit' Founder: Who Is Mohammed al-Sinwar?

Asharq Al-Awsat

time15-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Elusive Assassination Target, ‘Shadow Unit' Founder: Who Is Mohammed al-Sinwar?

Doubts persist over whether senior Hamas military commander Mohammed al-Sinwar has been killed or survived an alleged Israeli strike, as Israeli officials intensify efforts to confirm his assassination while Hamas remains tight-lipped. Multiple sources within the group have refused to confirm or deny al-Sinwar's fate, fueling speculation surrounding the elusive commander, who has a decades-long track record of evading Israeli assassination attempts. Al-Sinwar, the younger brother of slain Hamas leader Yehya al-Sinwar, has remained a top Israeli target throughout the Gaza war. Yet, for more than 18 months of fighting, Israel has not officially confirmed a direct strike on him — a fact that reinforces his reputation as a master of disguise and a 'high-value, hard-to-detect' target. Despite a 13-year age gap — Yehya was born in 1962 and Mohammed in 1975 — the two shared not only blood ties but a deep-rooted partnership within Hamas, rising through the ranks together to lead the group's military and political strategies. The timing of Israel's apparent attempt to target al-Sinwar — roughly 24 hours after the release of Israeli-American soldier Edan Alexander — has raised questions about whether the move was a calculated signal or the result of an intelligence breakthrough. Sources within Hamas and other Gaza-based militant factions declined to confirm or deny whether the operation to recover Alexander was linked to locating al-Sinwar's suspected hideout. Tuesday's intense airstrike, followed by a continued bombardment of the area on Wednesday that created a fire belt to prevent any rescue attempts, suggests Israel believed it was striking a high-value target. Israel's use of fire belts in a recent air assault on southern Gaza has drawn comparisons to previous assassination attempts targeting senior figures in Hezbollah and Hamas, including Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah and top Hamas military commanders Marwan Issa, Ahmed al-Ghandour, Bassem Issa and Jamal al-Zebda during the 2021 Gaza war. On Tuesday night, Israeli warplanes dropped dozens of bombs and missiles on the emergency yard and rear compound of the European Gaza Hospital east of Khan Younis, as well as surrounding areas — with strikes extending up to 500 meters in some directions and about 300 meters in others, according to field sources who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat. Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported that the attack involved bunker-busting bombs aimed at destroying a suspected underground tunnel network in the area. The strikes targeted multiple tunnel entrances to ensure that anyone hiding inside would be killed, even if not directly hit. Sources from Gaza-based factions told Asharq Al-Awsat that the location did in fact contain a tunnel system previously damaged in the 2014 war. Hamas' military wing, Al-Qassam Brigades, reportedly managed to restore the tunnels, which had only suffered minor damage in earlier attacks during the current conflict. As his role within Hamas expanded, al-Sinwar became a frequent target of Israeli assassination attempts spanning more than two decades. One of the closest calls came during the 2021 conflict, when he was lightly wounded in a tunnel strike alongside Rafaa Salama, the former commander of Hamas' Khan Younis Brigade. Both men survived the attack with minor injuries. Salama was later killed in an Israeli strike in July, along with Mohammed Deif, Hamas' elusive military chief, in the coastal al-Mawasi area. Al-Sinwar has survived at least seven Israeli assassination attempts over the past two decades, according to Hamas sources — a track record that has helped cement his image as one of the group's most elusive and high-value operatives. One early attempt came during the Second Intifada, which erupted in September 2000. In 2003, an explosive device was planted in the wall of his home, but he escaped unscathed. In 2006, an Israeli strike targeted a vehicle believed to be carrying al-Sinwar. He was not inside at the time, and the operation failed — one of several similar attempts over the years. In 2008, Hamas sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that al-Sinwar outwitted Israeli intelligence by manipulating radio communications. He allegedly used pre-recorded transmissions to give the impression he was speaking live over a two-way radio, prompting Israeli forces to bomb the signal's location. The attack missed its target — al-Sinwar was never there. In another reported incident in 2019, local media claimed that al-Sinwar, Salama and other Hamas commanders were the targets of an Israeli commando operation involving a plot to poison and abduct them from a beach in Khan Younis. The Al-Qassam Brigades swiftly denied the report, calling it baseless. Al-Sinwar is credited with founding the group's secretive 'Shadow Unit,' tasked with guarding high-value captives, including Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, according to Hamas sources who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat. The unit was established with approval from Mohammed Deif, the elusive commander of Hamas' armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades. Al-Sinwar personally oversaw the formation of its initial core, selecting trusted field operatives from his home city of Khan Younis in southern Gaza. Al-Sinwar's central role in the 2006 abduction and concealment of Shalit near the Rafah border prompted the creation of the unit. Sources say it was formed roughly three months after the kidnapping, following several Israeli airstrikes on suspected Shalit hideouts. The unit's existence remained classified until 2016 — five years after Shalit's release in a prisoner swap — when al-Qassam released previously unseen footage of the soldier during his captivity. According to the same sources, both Deif and al-Sinwar ordered the establishment of the unit, with many of its founding members hailing from the Khan Younis refugee camp. They included senior field commanders such as Abdul Rahman al-Mubasher, Khaled Abu Bakra, and Mohammed Dawoud — all of whom were later killed in Israeli operations in 2013 and 2021. Other key figures linked to the unit included Sami al-Humaidah from Rafah, killed in 2008, and Abdullah Labad, a top explosives engineer from Gaza's al-Shati camp, who was assassinated in 2011 along with his brother Ismail, a senior field operative involved in weapons production and smuggling. Al-Sinwar continued to expand and develop the Shadow Unit for years, discreetly recruiting new members and enhancing its capabilities. Its full mission only became clearer following the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led assault on southern Israel. Within Hamas, al-Sinwar has long been seen as the de facto operational commander of the al-Qassam Brigades, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat. While Deif remained the official general commander, al-Sinwar is believed to have overseen many of the group's military and administrative portfolios, shaping battlefield tactics and command structures behind the scenes.

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