http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/718934.html


IDF seizes Hamas bomb mastermind, most-wanted in West Bank

By Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent, Haaretz Service and Agencies




After an eight-year manhunt, Israeli security forces early Tuesday seized the 
Ramallah-area commander of Hamas' military wing, Israel's most wanted man in 
the West Bank.

Sheikh Ibrahim Hamed, 41, has been wanted since 1998 for terror attacks that 
claimed the lives of 78 of Israeli civilians and soldiers. 

Hamed was arrested at a hideout in the al-Balua neighborhood of Ramallah, 
surrendering to a combined force of Israel Defense Forces Dukefat troops, the 
Shin Bet security service, and the police anti-terror unit. 


The force surrounded the house in which Hamed was staying, but Hamed refused 
calls to come out. The troops then opened fire on the house, and when a 
bulldozer began to push against the walls of the structure, Hamed emerged, 
alone and apparently unarmed.

Local resident Mohammed Azzam, 48, said he watched the arrest from his balcony 
facing the two-story building where Hamed was holed up. The ground floor of the 
hideout consisted of shops with large iron doors. Two apartments were on the 
floor above.

Azzam said that at the start of the operation, an army bulldozer rammed the 
iron shop door. Over loudspeaker, troops then called out Hamed's name in 
accent-free Arabic. They told Hamed they would demolish the building with him 
inside if he didn't surrender, Azzam said.

Hamed emerged, wearing a light-colored shirt and gray pants. Following 
instructions over the loudspeaker, he took off his shirt and pants, then walked 
toward the soldiers in his underwear. Palestinian militants surrendering to 
troops are routinely asked to strip to make sure they are not carrying 
explosives.

After the arrest, soldiers entered the building and blew out the doors and 
windows in the two apartments, as a robot searched for explosives. Troops 
removed clothes from the building.

The two apartments were sparsely furnished with bamboo chairs and mattresses. A 
reporter touring the hideout saw two copies of Newsweek magazine on the floor.

The arrest operation then continued in a search for members of the network 
Hamed headed. A total of 12 Palestinians were arrested in overnight raids 
across the West Bank.

Among the attacks Hamed is believed to have helped plan and direct were:


A car bombing in Zion Square in the heart of Jerusalem five years ago, an 
attack which killed 11 people.


A suicide bombing at the Moment coffee house adjacent to the Prime Minister's 
official residence in the city, in which 12 people were killed. 


A double suicide bombing in September, 2003 which killed a total of 17 people 
at the Hillel cafe in Jerusalem's German colony, and adjacent to the Tsrifin 
IDF base.

The IDF colonel who led the capture said Hamas would have trouble replacing 
Hamed.

"What made him special was his creativity in finding very complex ways to 
attack Israelis," the colonel told Army Radio.

Eluded manhunt through strict secrecy
Throughout his years in hiding, Hamed maintained strict secrecy, and was in 
contact with only a few of the members of his network.

His modus operandi was to act relatively infrequently, and then to disappear, 
in an effort to make it more difficult to track him down.

He was considered a figure of some mystery, and for years security forces 
questioned whether they had an authentic photograph of him.

In a complex operation in Ramallah two years ago, security forces came close to 
capturing Hamed, killing two of his senior aides. Hamed escaped at the last 
minute.

Hamed was not known to have been involved recently in planning terror attacks, 
following a decision by the Hamas leadership to hold to a relative truce, in 
effect since January, 2005.

Hamed's nephew, Ayman, said his uncle has been wanted by Israel since 1998. For 
some time, he was held in a Palestinian jail for involvement in the Hamas 
military wing, but was released in 2002, during a major Israeli military 
offensive in the West Bank. Hamed graduated from the West Bank's Bir Zeit 
University in 1993, with degrees in history and political science, the nephew 
said.

Hamed grew up in the West Bank village of Silwad, and belongs to the same clan 
as Khaled Mashaal, the top Hamas leader based in Damascus. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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