Holly Johnson
The National / August 6, 2024
The head of the group’s operations in Gaza, Sinwar is one of Israel’s most-wanted targets.
Hamas has named Yahya Sinwar as its new political leader following the assassination of its chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran last week.
The news was confirmed in a statement published by the group on Telegram.
“The Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas announces the selection of leader Yahya Sinwar as head of the movement’s political bureau, succeeding the martyr leader Ismail Haniyeh, may God have mercy on him,” it read.
Sinwar, one of the founding members of Hamas, is the head of its operations in Gaza and has overseen the group’s activities in the war-torn enclave since 2017.
He is considered the mastermind of the October 7 attack on southern Israel which sparked the current war, and is one of Israel’s most-wanted targets.
He has not made any public appearances since the war began, although the Israeli army has published footage it claims to show the leader in a Gaza tunnel on October 10.
“Yahya Sinwar is the commander … and he is a dead man,” Israel’s army spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said in early October.
In December, the Israeli army issued a $400,000 bounty on Sinwar and dropped leaflets over Gaza offering cash rewards for information leading to his capture.
The announcement comes less than a week after the suspected Israeli assassination of Haniyeh, who was killed while staying at an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) guesthouse in Tehran after attending the inauguration of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
Hamas, Iran and regional allies have vowed “harsh punishment” against Israel over the attack, sending tensions soaring and raising the prospect of an all-out war with Lebanon, where the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group is based.
Haniyeh was a chief negotiator for the militant group in delicate months-long efforts to broker a ceasefire in Gaza, where almost 40,000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 90,000 wounded since the war began.
Hamas said the negotiations, brokered by Qatar and Egypt, were “clinically dead” following the suspected assassination, which has not been publicly claimed by Israel, and would not resume for at least a week.
It is unclear how the new appointment will affect ceasefire talks.
However, Hamas political bureau member Osama Hamdan said that the negotiations to stop the war in Gaza shall continue “under the supervision” of the group’s new leader.
He added in a statement that “the negotiations were conducted by the leadership, and Sinwar was always present and he was not far from the negotiations”.
“It is too early to talk about what the negotiation process will lead to,” he stressed; however, the team “that followed the negotiations under the leadership of the martyr (Ismail) Haniyeh will continue to do so under the supervision of Sinwar”.
Hamdan said that the new chief was “unanimously” chosen to lead the group. “Mr Sinwar is accepted by everyone in the group and is the subject of consensus.”
The news also comes as the war threatens to spill over into an all-out conflict in Lebanon, where Israeli jets broke the sonic barrier several times on Tuesday evening as Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah spoke for the first time since the death of Haniyeh and Hezbollah commander Fouad Shukr, killed just hours apart.
He said Israel’s punishment “is coming” and claimed other regional allies would also stage attacks on Israel, which has been on high alert since last week.
Iran has threatened a direct attack in the near future, citing its “duty” to avenge Haniyeh.
Israeli authorities have upped GPS jamming in Tel Aviv and central parts of the country, while local councils in the south have opened public bomb shelters and northern residents have been told to avoid any non-essential travel.
At least 19 people were wounded in an explosion in the northern city of Nahariya earlier on Tuesday, later said to be caused by an army interceptor missing its target.
Many nations have also urged their citizens to immediately leave Lebanon for fear the war will imminently escalate.
Holly Johnston – Breaking News reporter, Abu Dhabi
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From ‘Butcher of Khan Younis’ to leader of Hamas: who is Yahya Sinwar ?
The National / August 6, 2024
Israel has reportedly placed a $400,000 bounty on the head of the most-wanted militant in the Gaza Strip.
Hamas’s new political leader Yahya Sinwar is a founding member of the group’s military and intelligence wings and is believed to be the mastermind behind the October 7 attack that killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel.
He is the most-wanted militant in the Gaza Strip, with a $400,000 dead-or-alive bounty on his head.
Sinwar’s surprise appointment sees him succeed Ismail Haniyeh, who was killed in Tehran last week.
The white-haired leader’s whereabouts are unknown. He has remained in hiding for 10 months since Israel declared war on Hamas in Gaza, which has led to the killing of more than 39,600 Palestinians. Israeli officials believe he is most likely hiding – and commanding operations – from somewhere inside the extensive network of underground tunnels built by Hamas.
Sinwar, 61, spent much of his adult life in Israeli prisons before being released in a 2011 prisoner swap. He emerged as the militant group’s leader in Gaza – its top leadership resides abroad – in 2017.
After the October 7 attack, Israel described him as the “face of evil” and the “mastermind” behind the raid.
Sinwar, commonly known as Abu Ibrahim, grew up in Khan Younis, the main city in southern Gaza, and helped found Hamas in the 1980s.
In 1985, he founded Al-Majd intelligence and security apparatus that worked to identify Israeli collaborators among the population in Gaza. It was Sinwar’s harsh dealings with suspected collaborators that earned him the nickname “The Butcher of Khan Younis”.
In early 1988, he was arrested and given four life sentences for his role in the killing of two Israeli soldiers. He used the subsequent 23 years in prison, nearly four of which were spent in solitary confinement, to become fluent in Hebrew and learn about Israel’s society and culture.
According to one of about 240 hostages captured on October 7, who was freed during an exchange between Hamas and Israel in November, Sinwar visited captives held in Gaza’s tunnel network early in the war.
“Hello, I am Yahya Sinwar. You are the most protected here. Nothing will happen to you,” he reportedly told the group in flawless Hebrew.
Sinwar positioned himself as a leader among inmates during his time in prison and led a series of hunger strikes to demand better conditions. He served several terms in the leadership body of the Hamas prisoners’ union.
While in prison he also translated several books on Israel’s security apparatus and, like many Palestinian prisoners, published several of his own works by smuggling them out of prison in bits and pieces. One such work was his semi-autobiographical novel Thistle and Cloves, about a young Palestinian man navigating Israeli occupation after the 1967 war.
Israeli intelligence assessments from his time in prison describe Sinwar as a “cruel, authoritative, influential” leader who had “unusual abilities of endurance” and an ability to “carry crowds”.
In May, the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Karim Khan said that there were “reasonable grounds” to believe Sinwar and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu bore responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity. He said he was seeking arrest warrants for both men, among others.
In February, Israel’s army released a video that it said was of the Hamas’ chief, filmed on October 10, with members of his family in a tunnel in Gaza. The black and white images show a man alleged to be Sinwar, being led through a tunnel together with a woman and three children. The footage was the first of him since Israel’s war on Gaza broke out.
Israeli security officials have also extensively questioned hostages released by Hamas, hoping they could have heard or seen anything that might help them track him down.
However, Sinwar is not an easy target.
Secure lines
In November, during the negotiations that led to a week-long truce and hostage and prisoner swap, Egyptian officials said Sinwar occasionally stopped taking calls for days because of security concerns. He routinely had aides schedule calls from Egyptian and Qatari mediators or fellow Hamas leaders.
He used secure lines that he would frequently change and sophisticated jamming devices to avoid exposing his location to the Israelis. He often communicated with Hamas’s field commanders through coded written messages.
In 2021, shortly after the fourth war between Hamas and Israel since 2008 and following an attempt on his life, Sinwar openly challenged Israel to assassinate him during a live news conference in the coastal territory.
“When I am done here, I will be walking for most of my journey home,” he said.
“I will wrap this up in 10 minutes and it will take me another 10 minutes to get ready to leave, then I will walk for 20 or 30 minutes. That’s nearly one hour or 3,600 seconds; enough for Israel to weaponize an aircraft and launch it,” he taunted Israel.
“Yet, I will not bat an eyelid,” boasted Sinwar.
Shortly after the news conference, Palestinian television networks aired footage of the Hamas leader confidently walking the streets of Gaza, surrounded by aides and security guards while joyfully greeting and shaking hands with his supporters.
The last time he was seen in public is believed to be a year before the attack on Israel.
The appointment of Sinwar signals Hamas’s defiance following the assassination of Haniyeh, who lived in Qatar and was the group’s top ceasefire negotiator.
Haniyeh was killed in a suspected Israeli attack at an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) guesthouse in Tehran last week after attending the inauguration of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.
Hamas, Iran and regional allies have vowed “harsh punishment” against Israel, sending tensions soaring and raising the prospect of an all-out war in Lebanon, where the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group has been exchanging cross-border fire with Israel since October 8.