GAZA, May 25 (Xinhua) -- The Palestinian Islamic Hamas movement tries to
get a legal opinion allowing it to carry out death penalties in the Gaza Strip
without the need of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' approval, a spokesman
said on Monday.
According to the Palestinian law, the Palestinian president has to ratify
the death sentences before being carried out. Currently, Hamas is locked in a
power struggle with Abbas and most of the convicted were members of Abbas' Fatah
party, Hamas' bitter rival.
"There is a committee studying how to implement the execution penalties
against a number of people in Gaza," said Taher al-Noono, spokesman of the
deposed Hamas government which controls the coastal Strip.
"The committee comprises legal experts from the government and officials
from the Ministry of Justice and may raise its recommendation soon," al-Noono
added.
"A number of death verdicts have accumulated against some collaborators
with the Zionist occupation in addition to others who committed killings in the
past," al-Noono said. "If the committee approved the executions, we would
implement its decision," he added.
Hamas reinstalled the judicial system in Gaza after it routed pro-Abbas
forces and took over the Gaza Strip in June 2007. Abbas moved his power to the
West Bank.
On Sunday, a Hamas military court issued death sentences against three
members of Abbas' presidential guards, accused them of killing two Hamas
journalists in Gaza in May 2007.
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