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New details: Hamas leader Jahja Sinwar died from a targeted shot in the head

New details: Hamas leader Jahja Sinwar died from a targeted shot in the head

More and more details are becoming known about the death of the “Butcher of Chan Yunis”. Jahja Sinwar was killed with a targeted shot in the head. Who the Israelis had caught, however, only became clear afterwards.

After the killing of the previous Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip, more and more details about Jihia al-Sinwar’s final hours are coming to light. According to the forensic scientist responsible for the autopsy, the mastermind of the massacre in Israel on October 7th last year was killed by a shot in the head. “The cause of death is a gunshot wound to the head,” senior pathologist at the National Center for Forensics in Tel Aviv, Chen Kugel, told US television channel CNN.

Shortly before the fatal shot at the most wanted terrorist in the Middle East, Israeli soldiers observed three men moving from building to building on Wednesday in the city of Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip, according to The New York Times newspaper, citing security circles reported in Israel and the USA. After a firefight in which an Israeli soldier was seriously wounded, one of the men fled into an adjacent house.

The Israeli military then piloted a drone in the building and discovered a hooded man covered in dust on a sofa who was throwing a stick at the remote-controlled aircraft. It only later turned out that it was Sinwar. A sniper then shot him in the head and an Israeli tank fired on the building, the New York Times reported.

For fear of booby traps, the troops were not pushed back into the house until after sunrise the following day. There she finally found a body that closely resembled Sinwar. “He had several injuries: a rocket wound on his right forearm, injuries from fallen masonry on his left leg and a lot of shrapnel in his chest.” “They caused serious injuries, but the cause of death is the gunshot wound to the head,” forensic experts said Bullet.

Shortly after Sinwar, Israeli soldiers also killed the Hamas chief’s bodyguard, Mahmoud Hamdan, according to the military. The commander of the Hamas battalion in Rafah’s Tal al-Sultan district died just 200 meters from where Sinwar lost his life. Hamdan was also responsible for guarding the six Israeli hostages murdered by his men in August.

Severed finger confirmed identity

The pathologist explained that one of the dead man’s fingers was cut off in order to determine his identity using a DNA test. “After the lab created a genetic profile, we compared it to the profile we had of Sinwar from his time as a prisoner. This is how we were finally able to identify him based on his DNA.”

Known as the “Butcher of Khan Yunis” for his brutality in dealing with political opponents, the Islamist war veteran was once sentenced to a lengthy prison sentence for the murder of four suspected collaborators and two Israeli soldiers and served over 20 years in private confinement. In 2011, he was one of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners released in exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit held in Gaza.

Body is in a secret location

According to media reports, Sinwar’s body is in a secret location in Israel. His remains could serve as a “bargaining bargaining chip” in talks about the release of hostages held by Hamas, CNN reported, citing Russian diplomatic circles. “If Hamas wants to exchange their bodies for Israelis, dead or alive, then so be it,” a person familiar with the matter was quoted as saying. Without such a deal, the body should not be sent to Gaza. There is concern in Israel that Sinwar’s grave could become a place of pilgrimage for his followers in the coastal area sealed off by Israel and devastated in the war.

The hunt for the Hamas leader

Immediately after the bloody attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, in which Islamist terrorists killed more than 1,200 people and kidnapped another 250 into the Gaza Strip, Israel’s armed forces and secret services opened the hunt for chief planner Sinwar. But he didn’t make it easy for them. According to security experts, he spent a long time in the extensive tunnel system under the Gaza Strip, surrounded by hostages. Accordingly, he did without cell phones and computers and only communicated with his fighters via messengers so as not to reveal his whereabouts.

After the armed forces recovered the bodies of the six slain hostages from a tunnel in late August, they were able to detect Sinwar’s urine in the underground complex using DNA testing, according to the New York Times report. After that, the noose tightened more and more. The secret services repeatedly observed masked people in the Tal al-Sultan district who appeared to be accompanied by bodyguards – an indication that they were probably prominent Hamas figures.

But in the end there was also a bit of luck. According to the New York Times, the military patrol that Sinwar eventually set up was actually only in the area to collect further clues. Then she managed one of the most important blows against Hamas since the beginning of the Gaza war.

AFP/dpa/luz