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Hamas-run court gives Gaza gang leader Abu Shabab 10 days to surrender

Hamas-run court gives Gaza gang leader Abu Shabab 10 days to surrender

Al Jazeera14 hours ago
A Hamas-run court in Gaza has ordered Yasser Abu Shabab, the leader of a criminal group allegedly backed by Israel, to surrender himself for trial.
The Revolutionary Court of the Military Judiciary Authority in Gaza gave the 35-year-old head of the Popular Forces group, which stands accused of collaborating with Israel to loot humanitarian aid, 10 days to turn himself in.
Abu Shabab faces charges of treason, collaborating with hostile entities, forming an armed gang and armed rebellion, the court said on Wednesday, adding that he would be tried in absentia if he fails to surrender.
The Popular Forces posted a response on a Facebook page that usually carries its announcements, describing the court's order as a 'sitcom that doesn't frighten us, nor does it frighten any free man who loves his homeland and its dignity'.
The group and its leader were thrust into the limelight last month when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government had 'activated' powerful local clans in Gaza on the advice of 'security officials'.
Israeli and Palestinian media named the group as the Popular Forces, a well-armed Bedouin clan led by Abu Shabab, reportedly consisting of about 100 armed men.
The group later said online that its members were involved in guarding aid shipments sent to distribution centres run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which Israel contracted to distribute aid in the enclave.
Mass killings of aid seekers near the US-backed GHF distribution centres, which replaced existing distribution networks run by the United Nations and other experienced aid groups, have become a routine occurrence.
The European Council on Foreign Relations think tank has described Abu Shabab as the leader of a 'criminal gang operating in the Rafah area that is widely accused of looting aid trucks'.
It said he was thought to have been previously imprisoned by Hamas for drug trafficking.
The court urged Palestinians to inform Hamas security officials about the whereabouts of Abu Shabab, who has so far remained beyond their reach in the Rafah area of southern Gaza held by Israeli troops.
It said anyone who knows of Abu Shabab's location and fails to report him would be considered to have concealed a fugitive from justice.
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