Kidnapped Italian activist found dead in Gaza
Ibrahim Barzak, Associated Press, Gaza City | Fri, 04/15/2011 6:18 PM
The body of an Italian pro-Palestinian activist was found hanged in a Gaza house just hours after the man was abducted by an al-Qaida-inspired group, Hamas said early Friday, the first kidnapping of a foreigner since militant Palestinians overran the coastal strip in 2007.
Hamas officials said police stormed an apartment in Gaza City where Vittorio Arrigoni, 36, was being held by members of a small Islamic group that had kidnapped him on Thursday. Arrigoni was dead and the apartment was otherwise empty, the officials said.
In Rome, the Italian Foreign Ministry condemned what it called a "barbaric murder" and a "vile and irrational gesture of violence on the part of extremists indifferent to the value of a human life."
The group, calling itself Monotheism and Holy War, had released a video Thursday showing the kidnapped activist blindfolded and with cuts on his face, held in front of the camera by a fist gripping his hair. The group demanded that Hamas free its leader and two other members jailed by Hamas.
The abduction highlights challenges that Hamas - an Iran-backed group with a militant Islamist ideology, considered a terrorist organization by the U.S., the European Union and Israel - has faced from smaller Islamic factions in Gaza. Some of these, including the one apparently behind Arrigoni's abduction, are inspired by al-Qaida and the world jihad movement.
Arrigoni had come to Gaza as a pro-Palestinian activist. According to a press release from his organization, the International Solidarity Movement, he had spent several years "monitoring human rights violations by Israel, supporting the Palestinian popular resistance against the Israeli occupation and disseminating information about the situation in Gaza to his home country of Italy."
Kidnappings of foreigners in Gaza took place with some regularity before Hamas took control of the territory in 2007. All were released unharmed. There had been no abductions since shortly after Hamas took power.
One of the leaders of the International Solidarity Movement, Huweida Arraf, condemned Arrigoni's "senseless killing."
"Vittorio was really loved in Gaza," she said. I didn't think there was even a 1 percent chance they would kill him. It was a complete shock."
The ISM has no immediate plans to pull its volunteers out of Gaza, she said.
Hamas said two people were arrested in another location in connection with the killing, and a third was being sought.
In a statement, the Hamas Interior Ministry said Arrigoni's captors killed him shortly after he was abducted midday Thursday. Salama Marouf, a Hamas government spokesman, said the killing was an act "against the humanity and against the custom and tradition of the Palestinian people."
Groups like the one that appeared to be behind Arrigoni's killing have occasionally clashed with Hamas in the past. The Brussels-based International Crisis Group said in a report last month that these groups follow a "strict interpretation of Islamic law and see themselves not as liberators of Palestine but as part of a global movement of armed fighters defending Muslims against non-Muslim enemies."
Hamas' relations with the jihadi groups, according to the same report, have "shifted from cooperation to antagonism."
Hamas' rivals from the Western-backed Palestinian government in the West Bank, the Palestinian Authority, condemned the killing. Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, called Arrigoni's death a "despicable and ugly crime.'
He attributed it to a "situation of chaos and lawlessness" in Gaza under Hamas rule, and urged the Islamic group to end its rift with the Palestinian Authority.
Journalists were not allowed to see the body in the morgue and could not independently confirm the cause of death given by Hamas. An Italan doctor was on his way from Israel to examine the body, a Hamas official said.
Arrigoni was a well-known figure in Gaza, frequently clenching a pipe between his teeth and wearing a beret in a likeness to Che Guevara, as well as bracelets in the red, black, green and white colors of the Palestinian flag. He was an outspoken critic of Israel, but in an interview with The Associated Press in 2008 he also criticized Muslim extremists for trying to impose a hardline version of Islam in Gaza. He noted the increase in the number of Gazan women wearing Islamic face veils and the fact that young women were barred fom participating in public life. He said he hoped the presence of Western volunteers like him would help liberalize Gazan society.
He blamed the blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt on Gaza for growing extremism, saying that sealing off the coastal territory meant many of its youth were not exposed to any ther way of life.
The blockade, which has since been partly relaxed, was imposed in response to years of rocket barrages into Israel and militant attacks on border crossings.
Arrigoni's organization, the International Solidarity Movement, operates in the West Bank and Gaza. Its volunteers protest against Israel and interfere with the operations of the Israeli military.
In 2003, an American ISM activist, Rachel Corrie, was crushed by an Israeli military bulldozer in a combat zone in southern Gaza while trying to block its path. A British activist with the group was fatally shot by an Israeli soldier in the same area that year. A third ISM activist, a Palestinian, was shot and killed by Palestinian militants in the West Bank town of Jenin in 2007.