'Shock, anger, tears' in Palestinian village of slain Hamas deputy

Accused by Israel of masterminding numerous attacks against the country, Saleh al Arouri was elected in 2017 as deputy head of Hamas's political bureau, officially becoming the movement's number two.

Palestinian Hamas suporters in the West Bank city of Ramallah protest on January 2, 2024, against a drone strike attributed to Israel which killed Hamas deputy leader Saleh al Arouri in Beirut. / Photo: AFP Archive
AFP Archive

Palestinian Hamas suporters in the West Bank city of Ramallah protest on January 2, 2024, against a drone strike attributed to Israel which killed Hamas deputy leader Saleh al Arouri in Beirut. / Photo: AFP Archive

Palestinian mourners broke into sobs as they huddled around defiant family members of slain Hamas deputy Saleh al Arouri in his village in the occupied West Bank, a day after his death in Lebanon.

Arouri, exiled from his village Arura since he was released from an Israeli jail in 2010, was killed in a drone strike on a southern Beirut suburb that Lebanese officials said was carried out by Israel.

Holding a photograph of her son framed in gold, Aisha al Arouri, 81, said she struck a note of defiance when weeping village women informed her of his death.

"I told them: 'Why are you crying? Do not cry. Bring a box of sweets and distribute them to the people,'" she told AFP news agency, placing her son's picture in her lap.

"He asked for martyrdom," she said. "And he got it."

Accused by Israel of masterminding numerous attacks against the country, Arouri was elected in 2017 as deputy head of Hamas's political bureau, officially becoming the movement's number two.

Israel has not claimed responsibility for his killing.

But Arouri, based in Lebanon, was in its crosshairs following October 7, when Hamas fighters from Gaza stormed into southern Israel and launched a deadly attack on Israeli communities.

The attack resulted in the death of some 1,140 people dead in Israel. Hamas also seized around 250 hostages, according to Israeli officials.

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After the attack, the worst in its history, Israel began a relentless bombardment and ground offensive that has killed at least 22,313 people, mostly women and children, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza.

Dalal al Arouri, sister of Arouri, told AFP she was questioned by Israeli intelligence after she met him in person in Saudi Arabia last summer.

She last spoke to him for a few minutes on the morning of October 7. "He told me: 'I am fine,'" she said, adding that he informed her that Hamas had launched a raid on southern Israel.

Dalal said she was unable to reach his phone after news of his killing emerged on Tuesday, confirming her fears.

The village of Arura, replete with olive orchards and verdant terraced farms, plunged into mourning as news of his killing spread.

Amid a general strike in the occupied West Bank, shops were shut in the village of some 5,000 people.

News television crews were largely the only sign of life on its deserted streets.

Arouri had not set foot in the village in more than a decade. After spending almost 20 years in Israeli prisons, he was freed in 2010 on condition that he go into exile.

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'Shock, anger, tears'

His mother said Arouri got married after being released from prison and she encouraged him to remain in exile rather than run the risk of being arrested again.

After the October 7 attacks, Israeli forces raided his village and demolished his empty multi-storey house, which is close to his mother's home.

Outside the destroyed house, Israeli troops hung a banner that read: "This was the house of Saleh al Arouri and has become the headquarters of Abu al Nimer" –– an alias for the Israeli intelligence officer responsible for the area, according to village residents.

An image of the banner, seen by witnesses including his nephew Majed Sulaiman, was widely circulated on social media.

Village residents said they tore down the banner after the troops left.

Days after the October 7 attacks, Israeli forces detained some members of Arouri's family in a raid.

"We feel shock, anger, tears," Sulaiman, 28, told AFP, referring to news of Arouri's killing.

"We feel every emotion," he said, standing in front of the rubble of his uncle's demolished home.

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