Hamas’ top leader, Ismail Haniyeh, was buried in Qatar on Friday following his assassination in the Iranian capital, Tehran, as senior officials in the Palestinian group and other mourners said their fight against Israel would intensify, Reuters reports.
His death was one in a series of killings of senior Hamas figures as the war in Gaza between Hamas and Israel nears its 11th month and concern grows that the conflict is spreading across the Middle East.
Hamas and Iran have both accused Israel of carrying out Haniyeh’s killing and have pledged to retaliate against their foe. Israel has not claimed responsibility for the death nor denied it.
Haniyeh was laid to rest in a cemetery in the city of Lusail after a funeral ceremony at the Iman Mohamed Ibn Abd Al-Wahhab Mosque in Qatar’s capital, Doha.
His coffin, draped in the Palestinian flag, was carried in a procession past hundreds of people along with the casket of his bodyguard, who was killed in the same attack in Tehran on Wednesday.
Mourners at the ceremony included Khaled Meshaal, who is tipped to be the new Hamas leader. Other senior Hamas officials and Qatar’s Emir, Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani, also attended.
Senior Hamas official, Sami Abu Zuhri, told Reuters by phone: “Our message to the Occupation (Israel) today is that you are sinking deep in the mud and your end is getting closer than ever. The blood of Haniyeh will change all equations.”
Khaled Suleiman, who was among the mourners at the mosque, told Reuters: “Today we came … to affirm that the resistance will not end with the martyrdom of the leader, and behind the leader comes a new leader.”
“God willing, all of us will continue and all of us are on the way to the liberation of Al-Aqsa Mosque (in Jerusalem), Palestine and Gaza, God willing.”
Haniyeh was killed by a missile that hit him directly in a state guesthouse in Tehran where he was staying, senior Hamas official, Khalil Al-Hayya, said in Tehran.
The strike was one of several recent hits that have killed senior figures in Hamas or the Lebanese movement, Hezbollah, in a conflict that is now stretching from Gaza to the Red Sea and the Lebanon-Israel border and beyond.
In the United States, US President Joe Biden said Haniyeh’s killing was not helpful to international efforts to secure a ceasefire in the war in Gaza.
“It doesn’t help,” Biden told reporters on Thursday, when asked if the action ruined the chances of a truce.
Qatar has been leading the peace effort along with Egypt and the United States, Israel’s main ally.
Widow mourns
Haniyeh was the face of Hamas’ international diplomacy as an Israeli offensive destroyed Gaza.
He was seen by many diplomats as a pragmatist compared to the more hard-line members of the group inside Gaza, although some Israeli commentators have said he was considered by some on the Israeli side as an obstacle to a deal.
Three of his sons were killed in an Israeli airstrike in the besieged enclave in April along with four of his grandchildren, Hamas said.
For Palestinian supporters, the Hamas leadership are fighters for liberation from Israeli occupation, keeping their cause alive when international diplomacy has failed them.