Leader of Hamas death cult escapes from Egyptian prison

Guardian:

In a small cell in Egypt's al-Marj prison, the BBC World Service brought encouraging news to Ayman Nofel. The senior Hamas commander from Gaza had just passed the third anniversary of his imprisonment on unspecified charges.

The voice coming from his radio told him that prisoners at another Egyptian jail had been freed amid the chaotic uprising sweeping the country. He saw his chance and wasted no time.

"I shouted to other prisoners to break down the doors and gates," said Nofel, who described himself as the only political prisoner among al-Marj's criminal population. Using smuggled mobile phones to mobilise locals to storm the prison gates, Nofel and his fellow-prisoners fought their way outside the walls and to freedom.

In an unintended consequence of the Egyptian people's revolt against decades of repression and economic misery, the Hamas militant accused of planning bomb attacks against Israel found himself at the centre of a hero's welcome in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.

One by one, men queueing under the blue tarpaulin of a reception tent stepped forward to embrace the commander of the al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas's military wing. They flung arms around his shoulders, clapped his back vigorously and planted kisses on each cheek before turning to accept a celebratory sticky pastry and cup of potent Arabic coffee. Despite the festivities, Nofel, 37, a stocky man in a checked shirt, said he was ready to return to "work". Three years "and a few days" in the dank and wretched conditions of an Egyptian jail had not dulled his eagerness for what he described as "the next battle".

...

Now, he would "resume my work with the Qassam Brigades. We are preparing and training for the next battle. This is our right."

Nofel's unambiguous support and gratitude for Egypt's revolutionaries has not been universally shared in Gaza. Fatah supporters are worried that President Hosni Mubarak's demise could boost the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, the political partners of their arch-rivals Hamas.

...
Israel need to prepare to deal with this guy and those who follow him. He is a guy who thinks it is his job to commit mass murder of Jews. Hamas has its roots in the Egyptian Brotherhood and its charter reflects some of the same genocidal ideas.

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