Nizar Rayan

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Nizar Rayan
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Nizar Rayyan at a press conference 23 September 2005 in Gaza. (AFP)
Born (1959-03-06)6 March 1959
Jabalia
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Cause of death Air force attack
Ethnicity Palestinian
Known for Hamas leadership

Nizar Rayan (Arabic: نزار ريان‎‎, Nɩzár Rɑȋán; also transliterated Rayyan) (6 March 1959–1 January 2009) was a top Hamas leader who served as a liaison between the Palestinian organization's political leadership and its military wing. Also a professor of Islamic law, he became a top clerical authority within Hamas after the death of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in 2004. Rayan was a strong advocate between 1994 and 2004 or 2005 of suicide attacks on Israel, and his son killed himself on one such mission. Rayan and most of his family were killed in an Israeli airstrike during the Gaza War.

Personal life and background

Rayan was born in Jabalia, Gaza Strip on 6 March 1959.[1][2] In 1982, he received a bachelor of arts degree in religious principles from Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.[3] While there he was influenced by Wahhabism.[3] He then attended the University of Jordan in Amman and in 1990 received a masters degree with honors.[3] In 1994, Rayan completed his PhD in Islamic studies at the Omdurman Islamic University in Omdurman, Sudan.[3][4][5] His dissertation has the title of Future of Islam: Objective Analysis.[3]

After his studies, Rayan returned to Gaza and was employed as a preacher at several local mosques,[5] Jabalia's Imad Aqil Mosque (also known as the "Mosque of martyrs") among them.[6][7][8] He later became a professor of Islamic law at the Islamic University of Gaza.[9][10][11] Rayan was a leading authority on Hadith (sayings of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), and he amassed a 5,000-book library in his home.[5] An Israeli intelligence source describes Rayan as a strong opponent of Shia Islam, who opposed allowing the Shia branch of Islam to establish a foothold in Palestinian territories.[3]

Eventually, according to the The Jerusalem Post, Rayan became an important leader in Hamas, in particular a spiritual leader of Hamas's military wing,[5] and he regularly went on patrol with Hamas militia after delivering lectures at the Islamic University.[8] He arguably became Hamas's leading clerical authority after an Israeli airstrike killed Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in 2004.[6]

Rayan and Hamas began to strongly advocate for suicide bombing attacks to be carried out against Israel in 1994.[12] According to Chris Hedges who interviewed him, Rayan constantly recalled that Hamas, "began to target Israeli civilians in 1994 only after Palestinian worshipers were gunned down in a Hebron mosque by a Jewish settler, Baruch Goldstein."[11]

In 2001, with Rayan's backing his 22-year-old son went on a suicide bombing mission in which he died and killed two Israelis at the former Israeli settlement Elei Sinai in the Gaza Strip.[8][12][13][14][15][16][17] Rayan is alleged to have directed the 2004 Ashdod Port attack which killed ten people.[5][17][18][19] Hamas ceased its suicide attacks against Israel in 2005,[8][10] but Rayan advocated for their renewal after the 2008-2009 Gaza conflict began.[20]

Rayan was one of the principal architects of the 2007 Battle of Gaza, in which Fatah security forces were routed and between 116 and 400 Fatah and Hamas fighters and civilians lost their lives. Both Hamas and Fatah were accused of atrocities, including torture, during that conflict.[8][21][22] According to The Jerusalem Post, Rayan, "boasted that the Strip had been 'cleansed' of 'traitors' and 'CIA agents' - a reference to Abbas and his former security chiefs."[5] According to a Hamas spokesperson, it is possible the Fatah-dominated Palestinian National Authority asked Israel to kill Rayan due to his role in the Hamas-Fatah clashes.[5] He added that Rayan was one of the main reasons why many of Mahmoud Abbas's men "did not sleep well at night."[5]

Rayan was fundamentally opposed to the state of Israel.[13] According to Israeli-American writer Jeffrey Goldberg, he at one time stated, "True Islam would never allow a Jewish state to survive in the Muslim Middle East. Israel is an impossibility. It is an offense against God."[23] Goldberg also reported that Rayan said he believed Jews are a "cursed people" some of whom were transformed into pigs and apes by Allah,[23] and that Jews must pay for murdering the prophets of Islam and "closing [their] ears to the Messenger of Allah."[23]

Rayan married four women with whom he had twelve children.[24]

Islamization of the Gaza Strip

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Following the 2007 takeover of Gaza, Rayan said that "In a few hours, the secular era in Gaza will end without leaving a trace... Today heresy ends. Today the struggle is between Islam and the infidels, and it will end with the victory of the faith." He added that he will transform the PA security forces headquarters in Gaza to a mosque. Following the speech, Fatah members expressed fear that Hamas would transform Gaza into a Taliban-style "Islamist" emirate with Iranian and Syrian support.[25][26]

Israeli attack

Israeli F-16i of the 107th Squadron preparing for take-off during Gaza War

Rayan was killed in an Israeli Air Force strike on 1 January 2009 during the Gaza War.[27] The day before the attack, Rayan had advocated renewal of suicide attacks on Israel, declaring, "Our only language with the Jew is through the gun".[8] A 2,000-pound bomb was dropped on his house by an Israeli F-16 fighter jet, also killing his 4 wives (Hiam 'Abdul Rahman Rayan, 46; Iman Khalil Rayan, 46; Nawal Isma'il Rayan, 40; and Sherine Sa'id Rayan, 25) and 11 of their children (As'ad, 2; Usama Ibn Zaid, 3; 'Aisha, 3; Reem, 4; Miriam, 5; Halima, 5; 'Abdul Rahman, 6; Abdul Qader, 12; Aaya, 12; Zainab, 15; and Ghassan, 16).[12][15][28][29][30]

Unlike other Hamas leaders at risk of being targeted by Israel, Rayan did not go underground after the armed conflict with Israel began in late December 2008.[9][13][17][31] According to a Hamas spokesperson and Rayyan's son, the IDF warned Rayan by contacting his cell phone that an attack on his house was imminent.[4][8][17][32] An Israeli military spokesperson interviewed by The International Herald Tribune "could not give details or specify whether Rayyan's family had been warned."[33]

Israeli security sources stated that Rayan's house, at the time of the attack, was an arms warehouse and government communications center,[5] and contained a tunnel opening.[17] The sources also stated that a weapons stockpile in the house triggered many secondary explosions immediately after the missile attack.[8][16][29] The New York Daily News commented that Rayan had "sacrificed his children - in a vain attempt to protect a weapons cache beneath his home."[8] Israeli security forces legal officials regard striking homes used for weapons storage, when sufficient warning is given to the residents, as falling within the boundaries of international law and a legitimate act of war.[34] However, according to B'Tselem (The Israeli Center for Human Rights Information in the Occupied Territories), even if the Israeli charge that Rayan's house was a munitions warehouse were true, the large number of civilian lives taken rendered the attack "a grave breach of international humanitarian law." The Israeli NGO added that, given the Israeli military "knew or should have known" that civilians had not left Rayan's house, warning Rayan of the impending attack did not exempt Israeli forces from responsibility for the civilian deaths.[35] According to the Israeli Government report published in July 2009, Nizar Rayan was not the target of the attack; instead, the operational goal of the strike was to destroy Hamas’ central compound which included several buildings that served as storage sites for weapons. The report further states that specific phone calls to the residents of the targeted buildings were made, as well as two rounds of preliminary warning shots, 13 minutes and 9 minutes before the strike, were fired; a group of the residents leaving the building were seen by IDF surveillance, leading to a reasonable conclusion that the buildings were empty. The IDF suggests that in this case laws of armed conflict were not violated, as the strike was directed at proper military objective and at-risk civilians were issued effective advance warnings.[36]

Rayan was the most senior Hamas member killed since Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi was killed in Israeli airstrikes in 2004.[14] Hamas said that Israel would pay a "heavy price" for his death.[8]

References

  1. الغارات الإسرائيلية على قطاع غزة تودي بحياة قيادي بارز في حماس (alarabiya)
  2. According to The Independent, Rayan was born in 1956.[1]
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  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 No tears for Hamas leader in Ramallah, Jerusalem Post, 1 January 2009.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Nizar Rayan UK Guardian 3 January 2009
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  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 8.9 "Israel fells key Hamas strongman, escalating conflict; says it's ready for ground invasion" New York Daily News 1 January 2009 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "nydn" defined multiple times with different content
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  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 "Obituary: Nizar Rayyan" BBC 1 January 2009
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  20. Hardline Hamas leader killed in air strike on Gaza home The Telegraph 1 January 2009
  21. Exposing the bitter truth of Gaza carnage The Age (Australia) 23 June 2007
  22. "Gaza-Westbank–ICRC Bulletin No. 22/2007" Reuters 15 June 2007
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  26. Hamas says will not follow Taliban method in Gaza. Xinhua, 14 June 2007
  27. Israel raids kill Hamas leader, take Gaza death toll past 400 AFP, 1 January 2009
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  30. IOF Offensive on the Gaza Strip Continues for the 7th Consecutive Day Palestinian Centre for Human Rights 15 January 2009
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  35. The killing of Nizar Rayan and 15 members of his family B'Tselem 4 January 2009