Beirut: As the Gaza fighting wound down and expectations of a truce rose, a senior Hamas official said in an interview Thursday that the Palestinian militant group has no shortage of missiles and could continue bombarding Israel for months if it chose to do so.
Osama Hamdan spoke to the Associated Presshours before Israel announced a cease-fire in the bruising 11-day war against Hamas militants. The announcement late Thursday said an Egyptian proposal was accepted, though the sides were still determining exactly when the truce would take effect.
Hamdan said that Mohammed Deif, an elusive Hamas commander who has been hunted by Israel for decades, is alive and remains in charge of Gaza military operations.
Deif, also known as Abu Khaled, is by far Israel's most wanted target in Gaza. He has survived multiple Israeli assassination attempts, and is rarely seen in public.
Israeli media have said there were two more failed attempts during the current Israel-Hamas war, the fourth in just over a decade.
Hamdan told the APthat Deif is still heading the operation and directing the joint operations" of Hamas' military wing, the Qassam Brigades, and other factions. He provided no evidence for that statement.
Since the conflict began, Israel has levelled a number of Gaza City's tallest office and residential buildings, alleging they house elements of the Hamas military infrastructure.
Also read:Israel, Hamas agree to cease-fire to end bloody 11-day war
On Saturday, an Israeli strike destroyed the 12-story al-Jalaa Building, an office and residential tower where the offices of the AP and the TV network Al-Jazeerawere located. The military gave a warning ahead of the strike and occupants evacuated safely.
The APhas called for an independent investigation.
APPresident and CEO Gary Pruitt has said in statement that the APhad no indication of a Hamas presence in the building. This is something we actively check to the best of our ability, he said.
Hamdan denied there was any military presence belonging to Hamas or any other armed group in the building.
In the interview, Hamdan said his group could continue bombarding Israel for months if it chose to do so.
I can assure that what we saw during the first days in terms of bombarding Tel Aviv and some areas in Jerusalem, can continue not only for days or weeks but for months, said Hamdan. But he added that he believed a cease-fire announcement is near.
Hamdan, who is based in Beirut, is a member of Hamas' powerful decision-making political bureau.
Hamas is a militant off-shoot of the pan-Arab Muslim Brotherhood and has sworn to pursue Israel's destruction. It has been branded a terrorist group by Israel, the US, the European Union and other Western allies.
Founded in 1987, Hamas consists of a secretive military wing and an above-ground political organisation. Its leader, Ismail Haniyeh, runs Hamas from exile in Qatar. The group's power center remains Gaza, the small territory it seized from internationally-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' forces in 2007.