Misplaced Pages

Assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
2001 murder in Jerusalem, Israel

Assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi
Part of the Second Intifada militancy campaign
Assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi is located in JerusalemAssassination of Rehavam Ze'eviclass=notpageimage| The attack site
LocationHyatt Regency hotel, Mount Scopus, Jerusalem
Coordinates31°47′48″N 35°14′09″E / 31.79667°N 35.23583°E / 31.79667; 35.23583
Date17 October 2001; 23 years ago (2001-10-17)
c. 7:00 am (GMT+2)
TargetRehavam Ze'evi
WeaponsPistol with silencer
Deaths1 killed (Rehavam Ze'evi)
PerpetratorsThree Palestinian assailants. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility.

Israel's tourism minister Rehavam Ze'evi was assassinated shortly before 7 am (GMT+2) on Wednesday, 17 October 2001 at the former Hyatt Regency Hotel in Jerusalem by a squad of Palestinians acting on behalf of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine militant organization. Ze'evi was the first Israeli minister to be assassinated since the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin and the most senior Israeli person to be killed by Palestinian militants during the entire Arab–Israeli conflict.

Ze'evi's assassins fled the scene and hid for a time in the Mukataa compound in Ramallah under the auspices of Yasser Arafat. An agreement was eventually reached during Operation Defensive Shield, in which Israeli forces besieged the Mukataa compound. Ze'evi's assassins were transferred to the Jericho prison under the supervision of British and American guards. The Islamist militant organization Hamas won the Palestinian legislative elections in January 2006, and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh publicly announced his intention to free Ze'evi's assassin squad members. On 14 March 2006, the American and British guards left the Jericho jail, charging that the Palestinian Authority was not sticking to the agreement reached with Israel four years earlier. As a result, Israel launched Operation Bringing Home the Goods on the same day in which the Israel Defense Forces captured Ze'evi's assassins; they were tried in Israel, convicted, and given long prison terms.

Preparations phase

In September 2001 the PFLP reached a decision to assassinate the Israeli tourism minister Rehavam Ze'evi purportedly in retaliation for the targeted killing of the PFLP leader Abu Ali Mustafa by Israel in August 2001.

As a result, the PFLP began gathering detailed intelligence information on Ze'evi's whereabouts and schedule, and found out that he had a permanent room in the Hyatt Regency hotel in Jerusalem, located on the border between the neighborhoods of French Hill and Mount Scopus.

The assassin squad members booked a room at the hotel by telephone and provided a fake ID. The assassins arrived at the hotel the night before the assassination in order to prepare for the attack.

Assassination

On 17 October 2001, the day of the assassination, Rehavam Ze'evi was staying at the Dan Jerusalem Hotel, formerly called at the time, the Hyatt Regency Hotel, in room number 816. Ze'evi did not have any bodyguards, as he principally refused to change his habits due to terrorist threats.

At 6:00 am, one of the assassins, Hamdi Quran, went to the dining room of the hotel to make sure that Minister Ze'evi would indeed be there in accordance with his routine schedule. At 6:20 am Ze'evi and his wife Yael went down to the hotel's dining room. When Quran noticed the minister was in the dining hall, he immediately went back to the room where the assassins were staying and updated his associates. As a result, two assailants headed towards their vehicle, which was parked in the hotel's basement parking lot, to fetch their pistols which were modified with silencers. In order not to raise suspicion, the two assailants returned separately to their room through the staircase instead of the elevator.

The two assailants met in their room, prepared their weapons, and headed toward Ze'evi's room on the 8th floor. The assailants waited for Ze'evi near the fire escape, in a location adjacent to Ze'evi's room.

Meanwhile, at 6:45 am Ze'evi's driver, Adi Maman, arrived at the hotel's dining room and joined Ze'evi and his wife for breakfast. At 6:50 am Ze'evi headed by himself towards his room using the elevator. Two minutes later, Yael Ze'evi and the driver, Adi Maman, also began heading towards Ze'evi's room.

When the elevator door opened Ze'evi stepped out of the elevator and passed the two assailants. According to the assailants' testimony, Quran shouted at him "Hey!" and when Ze'evi turned to Quran, he shot Ze'evi in the head three times from a close distance. Two bullets hit Ze'evi's head. Although the second bullet hit Ze'evi's jaw and did not cause a fatal injury, the first bullet penetrated his brain and caused irreversible damage. Immediately after assassinating Ze'evi, the assassins escaped the scene of the crime. From the hotel, the assassins fled to the Palestinian Authority controlled area in the West Bank.

At 7:00 am, only a few minutes after the assassination, Yael Ze'evi and Ze'evi's driver discovered Ze'evi lying on the floor of the corridor, shot in the head and bleeding.

Ze'evi was rushed to the Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem in critical condition and the doctors attempted to save him. His death was eventually announced at 10:00 am.

Ze'evi was the first Israeli minister to be assassinated since the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, and the most senior Israeli person to be killed by Palestinian militants during the entire Arab-Israeli conflict.

Claim of responsibility

The PFLP claimed responsibility for the assassination and stated that it was carried out as a revenge for the killing of the PFLP leader Abu Ali Mustafa in August 2001. Rabah Muhana, a senior PFLP official, said "The Israelis killed one prominent leader and Mr Ze'evi is one of those who have very, very right-wing points of view on discrimination – he wants to deport Palestinians and he is with the most severe terrorism against the Palestinians".

Ze'evi's funeral

The assassination of Ze'evi was a shock to the Israeli public and left a lasting impression on many Israelis. Thousands of people attended the funeral of Ze'evi that took place a day after the assassination, at the Mount Herzl cemetery in Jerusalem, where Ze'evi was buried. President Moshe Katsav and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon eulogized Ze'evi at his funeral.

Official reactions

Involved parties

Israel

  • Prime minister Ariel Sharon stated that after Ze'evi's assassination "everything had changed", and he held the Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, personally responsible for the assassination.

Palestinian territories

  • Palestinian Authority condemned the assassination, but laced the statement with a call for Israel to immediately cease its policy of targeted killings of Palestinian militant leaders who Israel believes are responsible for launching attacks.
  • President of the Palestinian Authority Yasser Arafat condemned the act and said he would do all he could to arrest the assassins.

International

  • United Kingdom: UK prime minister Tony Blair condemned the assassination stating "We condemn utterly this contemptible act of violence".
  • United States: US President George W. Bush condemned the assassination in the strongest terms and called it a despicable act.

Subsequent related events

Israeli siege of the Mukataa and the following "Ramallah Agreement"

Immediately after the assassination, the Israeli security establishment launched an intensive investigation to track down the assassins and the PFLP leader who initiated and planned the attack. Israel demanded from the Palestinian Authority to arrest those responsible for the assassination.

In April 2002, during Operation Defensive Shield, Israeli security forces learned that the assassins were hiding in the Mukataa, Yasser Arafat's presidential compound in Ramallah, which Israeli troops had besieged since 29 March. Israel demanded that the Palestinian Authority hand over the assassins in return for withdrawing its troops. The Palestinian Authority refused to extradite the assassins. In the end, through international mediation, Israel agreed to a proposal (which came to be known as the "Ramallah Agreement") whereby Ze'evi's assassins would be imprisoned in a Jericho jail guarded by British and American forces, and in return Israel would remove the siege of Yasser Arafat's compound. As a result, in February 2002, Arafat ordered to arrest Ze'evi's assassin squad members and imprison them in the Jericho prison. In May 2002 the British and American forces arrived at the Jericho prison.

Nevertheless, after the Islamist militant organization Hamas won the Palestinian legislative elections in January 2006, the Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh publicly announced his intention to free Ze'evi's assassin squad members. On 14 March 2006, the American and British guards left the Jericho jail, charging that the Palestinian Authority was not sticking to the agreement reached with Israel four years earlier. As a result, Israel launched Operation Bringing Home the Goods on the same day.

Operation Bringing Home the Goods

Main article: Operation Bringing Home the Goods

On 14 March 2006, IDF forces raided the Jericho prison where Ze'evi's assassin squad members were imprisoned with the aim of preventing them from being released by the Hamas government, and bringing the assassins to face trial in Israel.

After a siege which lasted about 10 and a half hours, and after the Israeli military forces began using bulldozers to tear down the Jericho prison walls, the four assassins finally surrendered:

  • Ahed Abu Gholma – the mastermind behind the assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi.
  • Majdi Rahima Rimawi – the head of the assassination squad who was the getaway driver during the operation.
  • Hamdi Quran – the actual person who shot Rehavam Ze'evi.
  • Bassel al-Asmar – the look-out for the operation.

During the raid, in addition to the four assassins, Israel also captured Ahmed Saadat (who Israel alleges ordered Ze'evi's assassination) and Fuad Shubaki (suspected by Israel as being the mastermind behind a shipment from Iran of smuggled weapons seized by Israel in January 2002).

Assassins' trial in Israel

Ze'evi's assassins were tried in Israel. The four were convicted and received long prison terms – Quran received a sentence of 125 years in prison, Asmar received a sentence of 45 years in prison and Majdi Rahima Rimawi received a life sentence with an additional 80 years in prison and Ahad Olma was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in initiating and planning the assassination.

In addition, on 25 December 2008, an Israeli military court sentenced Ahmed Saadat, being the leader of the PFLP, to 30 years in prison for heading an "illegal terrorist organization" and for his responsibility for all actions carried out by his organization, especially for the assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi.

Honouring of assassin by Bezons, France

In February 2013, one of the gunmen involved in the murder, Majdi Al-Rimawi, was named a "honorary resident" of Bezons, a French city located 10 miles northwest of Paris. At a ceremony, the city's mayor, Dominique Lesparre, presented Rimawi's son, daughter and wife with the plaque honouring Rimawi. Lesparre describes Rimawi as being "jailed for 10 years for taking part with his people in the struggle to resist the occupation of their country" and as one of many Palestinians who has been "imprisoned for daring to defend their country." Lesparre was sharply criticized by Moshe Kantor, who stated that "It is inconceivable that an elected official can be so ignorant as to call a cold-blooded murderer a victim." The Israeli Foreign Ministry also criticized the decision, stating that it was "humanly outrageous to honor a convicted murderer, no political view can justify it."

See also

References

  1. Bennet, James (16 October 2001). "Right-Wing Israeli Minister Is Killed". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  2. ^ פרסום ראשון: שחזור רצח השר רחבעם זאבי – חדשות [Reconstruction of the murder of Minister Rehavam Ze'evi]. Nana 10 (in Hebrew). Archived from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  3. Shumpelby, Attila (17 October 2001). מקורות ביטחוניים: "שורת כשלים איפשרה את הרצח" [Defense sources: 'A series of failures made the murder possible']. Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  4. Glickman, Aviad (22 September 2008). "Ze'evi murder mastermind gets 105 years in prison". Ynetnews. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  5. Cohen, Merav (3 May 2004). שוב מגבשים מכרז לתעודות זהות חכמות [Once again, a tender for smart identity cards is being formulated]. Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  6. Lefkovits, Etgar (18 October 2001). "Rehavam Ze'evi assasinated [sic]. PFLP claims responsibility for Jerusalem hotel shooting". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 17 August 2011. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  7. Zohar, Assaf (17 October 2001). "Minister of Tourism Rehavam Zeevi assassinated at point-blank range in Jerusalem Hyatt". Globes. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013.
  8. ^ דין וחשבון בעניין רצח השר רחבעם זאבי ז"ל (חלק א') [An account of the murder of the late minister Rehabam Zeevi (Part A)] (in Hebrew). Committee on Intelligence and Secret Services. June 2002.
  9. Weiss, Efrat; Vaked, Ali (25 October 2001). רצח זאבי: נלכדו שני חברים בחוליית הרצח [Zaevi murder: two members of murder squad captured]. Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  10. Glickman, Aviad (29 July 2008). משלח המתנקשים בשר זאבי הורשע ברצח [Dispatcher of the Shesher Zaevi assassins convicted of murder]. Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  11. Lefkovits, Etgar (3 December 2007). "Rehavam Ze'evi's killer gets life". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  12. "נרצח רחבעם זאבי [2001]" [Assassination of Rehavam Ze'evi ]. News1 (in Hebrew). 16 October 2011. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  13. "Analysis: Israel's 'new era'". BBC News. 17 October 2001.
  14. ^ "Israeli minister shot dead". BBC News. 17 October 2001.
  15. "PFLP claims responsibility for Jerusalem assassination". Breaking News. 17 October 2001. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  16. Kalman, Matthew (18 October 2001). "Gunmen assassinate Israel's tourism minister; PLO faction claims responsibility; parts of West Bank have blockade reimposed". USA Today. p. A12. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012.
  17. "Eulogy by President Moshe Katsav for Minister Rechavam Ze-evy-18-Oct-2001". Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  18. "Eulogy by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for Minister Rechavam Ze-evy-18-Oct-2001". Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  19. ^ "Israeli minister assassinated". The Guardian. 17 October 2001. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  20. Kalman, Matthew (18 October 2001). "Israel threatens Arafat after official assassinated; Tourism minister slain; Israelis warn they'll treat Palestinans as terrorists". USA Today. p. A12. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012.
  21. "Thirty-three PFLP members arrested", CNN, 19 October 2001
  22. James Sturcke (15 March 2006). "Blair defends withdrawal of monitors from Jericho jail". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  23. "Israelis storm Jericho jail and seize 6" The New York Times. 14 March 2006.
  24. "Q&A: Israel's Jericho jail raid". BBC News. 15 March 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  25. "A politician's peril". Archived from the original on 13 October 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  26. Weiss, Efrat (25 December 2008). "Israel sentences PFLP leader to 30 years in prison". Ynetnews. AFP.
  27. French town fetes Palestinian planner of Israeli minister's assassination by Haaretz Staff, 10 March 2013.
  28. French town honours Israeli minister 'killer', Al-Jazeera, 11 March 2013.
  29. "French town honors killer of Israeli minister". The Jerusalem Post. JTA. 11 March 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  30. French mayor angers Israel by honoring Palestinian convicted in murder of Israeli minister, Fox News, Associated Press, 11 March 2013.

External links

Prominent terrorist attacks against Israelis in the history of the Arab–Israeli conflict – the 2000s
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
  Attacks launched from the West Bank   Attacks launched from the Gaza Strip   Attacks launched from Lebanon

indicates the terrorist attack which caused the greatest amount of Israeli casualties during the 2000s

1990s 2010s
Prominent attacks by Palestinian militants in the 2000s
Within
Israel
West Bank
Gaza Strip
Worldwide
Attacks launched from Lebanon Attacks launched from the West Bank Attacks launched from the Gaza Strip 1990s 2010s
Categories: