GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories, May 8:
Authorities in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip on Thursday executed two
Palestinians for allegedly collaborating with Israel, the territory’s
interior ministry said.
“Two collaborators with
the Israeli occupation, condemned to death for having given information
leading to the martyrdom of two citizens, have been executed,” a
spokesman told AFP.
He said one of the men,
aged 40 and identified by the initials ZR, was shot and the other, AK,
aged 30, was hanged in a different location.
The last execution in Gaza, in October, was of a man found guilty of murder.
Israeli security forces
use Palestinian informers to thwart attacks and assist in the
assassination of top militants. Most Palestinians view them as traitors.
Under Palestinian law, collaboration with Israel, murder and drug trafficking are all punishable by death.
All execution orders
must be approved by the Palestinian president before they can be carried
out, but Hamas no longer recognises the legitimacy of Mahmud Abbas,
whose four-year term ended in 2009.
Since the September 2000
outbreak of the second Palestinian uprising, dozens of Palestinians
accused of collaborating have been condemned by martial courts or killed
by militants in both Gaza and the West Bank, which is governed by
Abbas’s Palestinian Authority.
The European Union on
Wednesday condemned a death sentence passed last week in the southern
Gaza town of Khan Yunis on a man condemned for murder.
The European Union
“considers capital punishment to be cruel and inhuman, that it fails to
provide deterrence to criminal behaviour, and represents an unacceptable
denial of human dignity and integrity.”
“The de facto
authorities in Gaza must refrain from carrying out any executions of
prisoners and comply with the moratorium on executions put in place by
the Palestinian Authority, pending abolition of the death penalty in
line with the global trend,” it said.
In June Amnesty
International appealed to people to mail Hamas in protest at the hanging
of two alleged collaborators and to appeal against other pending
executions.
The London-based rights
organisation called on people to “write immediately in Arabic or your
own language condemning the executions… as applications of the ultimate
form of cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment.”
- AFP
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