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In this Thursday, March 3, 2016 photo, Fadya Shehata Moussa, left, and Iman Shaker Hanna, mothers of two of four Coptic Christian teens convicted for contempt of Islam, sit in the house of one of the teens in Bani Mazar, Minya province, Egypt. The teen boys were playing around, satirizing the extremist group, and their school supervisor just happened to be videoing them as they were imitating Muslim prayers and beheadings of the Islamic State group, their defenders say. The result has been catastrophic: The boys were sentenced to prison under Egypt’s blasphemy laws. (AP Photo/Thomas Hartwell)
In this Thursday, March 3, 2016 photo, Fadya Shehata Moussa, left, and Iman Shaker Hanna, mothers of two of four Coptic Christian teens convicted for contempt of Islam, sit in the house of one of the teens in Bani Mazar, Minya province, Egypt. The teen boys were playing around, satirizing the extremist group, and their school supervisor just happened to be videoing them as they were imitating Muslim prayers and beheadings of the Islamic State group, their defenders say. The result has been catastrophic: The boys were sentenced to prison under Egypt’s blasphemy laws. (AP Photo/Thomas Hartwell)
Blasphemy cases rise in Egypt and Christians bear the brunt - An attempt to appease the Muslim masses

BEIRUT: More than a thousand mourners attended the funeral in Beirut on Thursday of Hamas number two Saleh Al-Aruri who was killed in a Lebanon strike blamed on the Zionist entity. Calling on Hamas to avenge his death and the killing of five other members of the Palestinian militant group on Tuesday, the mourners gathered at a mosque to recite the prayer of the dead before marching to Shatila refugee camp where three of them were buried.

The coffins of the three, Aruri, Azzam al-Aqraa of the Hamas military wing Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, and Mohammad al-Rais, were draped in Palestinian and Hamas flags. A machine gun was laid on top of each coffin and heavy gunfire rang out as the funeral procession made its way to the cemetery, drowning out chants of “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest) by mourners waving Palestinian flags and those of Hamas ally Islamic Jihad.

“Abu Obeida, bomb Tel Aviv,” the mourners shouted, addressing the Gaza spokesman of the Hamas military wing by his nom de guerre. Aruri and the six other Hamas members were killed in a strike in a south Beirut stronghold of the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah. Hamas and Lebanese security officials accused the Zionist entity of launching the attack, with one high-level Lebanese security official saying they were targeted by guided missiles. A US defense official told AFP on Wednesday that the Zionist entity was behind the attack. The Zionist entity has not claimed responsibility.

Aruri is the most senior Hamas figure to be killed since the Gaza war broke out on October 7 after Hamas attacked the Zionist entity. “The assassination of Saleh Al-Aruri and of any other Palestinian is a failed act because the resistance will continue to produce new leaders,” one of the mourners, Oman Ghannum, told AFP. The 35-year-old Palestinian said he wanted to take part in the funeral procession “to denounce the genocide underway in Gaza and the violation of Lebanese sovereignty by (the Zionist entity)”.

‘They have failed’

In a pre-recorded speech broadcast at the funeral, the Hamas political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh, said: “The enemy thinks that with the assassination of Saleh Al-Aruri, it can defeat the resistance and impose its conditions. “But it has failed, and it will never be able to force Hamas to abandon its demands, its vision and its strategy,” he said from his base in Qatar.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned the Zionist entity in a speech on Wednesday against starting a war in Lebanon, vowing that his group would fight back without restraint. Several Hamas figures in exile reside in Lebanon, under the protection of Hezbollah. — AFP

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