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Shaer was abducted from his home in Ramallah by the Israeli occupation forces.
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RAMALLAH, West Bank — Israeli occupation forces
abducted early Saturday, August 19, Palestinian deputy Prime Minister
Naser Al-Shaer after raiding his home in the West Bank city of
Ramallah.
Israeli forces burst into Shaer's home before dawn
and took him away, his wife said, Reuters reported.
She said that "several jeeps circled the house
before dawn" then troops came to the door.
Shaer's wife said an Israeli officer told her after
checking their identity documents, "sorry madame, but your
husband has to come with us. He let him first say goodbye to our four
children."
An Israeli army spokesman confirmed that the
Palestinian minister was taken into custody for what he said
involvement with Hamas.
Two Hamas lawmakers also confirmed the abduction of
the Palestinian deputy premier by Israeli forces.
Israeli occupation forces have abducted the third
of the Hamas-led Palestinian government and 23 Hamas MPs since June
after launching a wide-scale offensive in Gaza on the pretext of
seeking the release of a soldier taken prisoner by Palestinian groups,
killing up to 180 Palestinians and wounding hundreds.
On August 5, Israeli forces abducted Palestinian
Legislative Council Speaker Aziz Dweik from his home in the West Bank
city of Ramallah.
He became the most senior of more than sixty
Palestinian cabinet ministers, lawmakers, mayors and politicians
kidnapped by Israeli forces.
Second Deputy Speaker Hassan Khreishe was also
kidnapped by Israel but released last Sunday after a one-month
detention.
Minister of Planning Samir Abu Eisheh was released
in mid-July, and Prisoners' Affairs Minister Wasfi Kibha was freed on
Wednesday.
Conditions
The Israeli abduction of the top Palestinian
official came hours after Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh conditioned
the release of Palestinian ministers and MPs in the Israeli jails for
forming a national unity government.
"There will be no national unity government as
long as ministers and elected officials are in Israeli prisons,"
Haniyeh told in the weekly Friday sermon, according to Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
"They must be released, especially Aziz Dweik,"
he added.
An Israeli military court on Thursday, August 17,
extended Dweik's remand.
Haniyeh also said that a Palestinian unity
government could only be formed after lifting the siege imposed on the
Gaza Strip.
"Any government must insist on the end of the
siege (in the Gaza Strip), the reason for which is that the government
is led by Hamas," he said.
He said a unity government must also be based on
the results of the Palestinian legislative election".
Neither could any official implicated in corruption
take part in any possible national unity coalition alongside Hamas, he
stressed.
On Wednesday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
had reported progress in efforts to form a national unity government.
The US and EU froze international aid to the
cash-strapped Palestinian Authority since the new Hamas-led
Palestinian government took power.
Israel also suspended the monthly payment of
customs duties, worth more than 50 million dollars, it collects on
behalf of the Palestinian Authority on goods that transit through its
territory.
This is affecting the livelihoods of around one
million people or a quarter of the population of the Gaza Strip and
West Bank.