Hamas PM warns of 'dangerous' situation

Deadly factional fighting in Gaza has created a “dangerous” situation, the Palestinian prime minister said today, adding that his security forces would try to get gunmen off the streets.

Deadly factional fighting in Gaza has created a “dangerous” situation, the Palestinian prime minister said today, adding that his security forces would try to get gunmen off the streets.

Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh spoke a day after a top militant was killed in a car bomb. His killing set off exchanges of fire that killed three Palestinians, wounded 36 and raised the possibility of wider clashes.

It was the first direct threat to the new Hamas government, which was sworn in earlier this week.

The militant, Abu Yousef Abu Quka, had ties to Hamas, and his supporters accused the Preventive Security Service, dominated by loyalists of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ defeated Fatah Party, of killing Abu Quka.

Haniyeh said today that top security officials were trying to end tensions, “because this is a dangerous situation and shouldn’t happen again”.

The prime minister said the security forces would also try to “pull our civilian gunmen off the streets”, but did not explain whether he was referring to all armed men who are not members of the security forces.

Gaza has been plagued by lawlessness in recent months, with gunmen roaming the streets with impunity. Many have ties to Fatah.

Abu Quka was a senior commander of the Popular Resistance Committees, an umbrella group of about 200 gunmen that has been linked to explosions of Israeli tanks and a deadly attack on a US diplomatic convoy in 2003.

About half the gunmen are allied with Hamas, including Abu Quka, and the other half with Fatah.

Hamas took control of the Palestinian Authority on Wednesday after trouncing Fatah in legislative elections in January.

It has pledged to restore order in the Gaza Strip and West Bank, but Palestinian security forces, most of them affiliated with Fatah, have been involved in some of the violence, and Hamas has little control over them.

Abbas, a moderate who favours peace talks with Israel, is a vocal critic of violence but has struggled to gain control over the security forces since his election last year.

On Friday evening, Haniyeh ordered an investigation and urged calm. “I want to stress the need not to slide toward civil war,” he said in a televised interview. “Let us not direct our arrows at each other.”

Hamas’ interior minister, Said Siyam, who is in charge of several security agencies, including preventive security, promised to bring Abu Quka’s killers to justice. He also called for unity. “We regret the exchange of accusations and mentioning of names,” he said.

Abu Quka was killed on Friday when his white Subaru blew up in a Gaza City street. The Popular Resistance Committees initially blamed Israel, which denied involvement, and then pointed to the Preventive Security Service.

Palestinian intelligence officials said Abu Quka was a known Hamas supporter, and appeared to have been targeted for his loyalties.

At a news conference to discuss the killing, rival gunmen burst on the scene, sparking a shootout.

Hospital officials said two boys, ages 15 and 13, were wounded, one seriously.

The violence escalated during Abu Quka’s funeral procession. Accompanying the body, hundreds of gunmen marched through the streets of Gaza City.

Gunfire broke out at the funeral. Hospital officials said three people were killed, including two bystanders and a PRC member who had joined the procession. Thirty-six others were wounded, six critically, they said.

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