Palestinian court drops case against ex-Gaza strongman

Top former Fatah official Dahlan, a rival of Abbas, cleared of role in misuse of $17 million

In this January 3, 2011 photo, Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in his office in the West Bank city of Ramallah. (AP/Majdi Mohammed)
In this January 3, 2011 photo, Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in his office in the West Bank city of Ramallah. (AP/Majdi Mohammed)

A Palestinian court on Sunday dismissed a high-profile corruption case against exiled Gaza strongman Mohammad Dahlan, in a move that could open the door for his return to the West Bank.

It was an unexpected end to a case which began in December with the former top Fatah official put on trial in connection with the alleged misuse of $17 million in expenses.

The Ramallah-based corruption court ruled on Sunday that the charges against Dahlan — once a leading figure in Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party — were “inadmissible,” his legal team said.

“This is a great victory for the defense but also for the political future of Palestine,” said Sevag Torossian, one of Dahlan’s lawyers, who had denounced the trial as a politically motivated “farce.”

Torossian praised the “courage of the judges who have just demonstrated the independence of the judicial system from the executive.”

The ruling was hailed by Dahlan as a victory for the Palestinian judicial system.

“I very much welcome the court’s decision — it is a ruling which serves justice and enhances the status of the Palestinian judicial system,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

Once a leading Fatah figure who headed Gaza’s powerful security apparatus, Dahlan fell from grace in June 2007 after the humiliating rout of his forces by Hamas in week-long street battles that saw the Islamists expel Fatah from the coastal enclave.

Now in exile in Dubai, he has faced a series of legal cases, but is still considered a potent potential rival to Abbas, close aides say.

In its Sunday ruling, the court said that a 2012 presidential decree lifting Dahlan’s parliamentary immunity had not been carried out in line with the law.

Under Palestinian law, a lawmaker’s immunity can only be removed after a parliamentary vote but the Palestinian Legislative Council has not convened since Hamas expelled Fatah from Gaza.

Palestinian supporters of dismissed senior Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan shout slogans during a protest in Gaza City on December 18, 2014 (AFP/Mohammed Abed)
Palestinian supporters of dismissed senior Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan shout slogans during a protest in Gaza City on December 18, 2014 (AFP/Mohammed Abed)

Dahlan was last year convicted in absentia of defamation and sentenced to two years in prison.

The Palestinian high court last month upheld the presidential decree lifting his immunity, rejecting an appeal by Dahlan.

But his legal team said that following the dismissal of the corruption charges, they would try to have the defamation conviction overturned on the same grounds.

That could pave the way for Dahlan to return to the West Bank without fear of imprisonment.

The Gaza-born politician was expelled from Fatah in 2011 over allegations of financial corruption and murder, and his name draws both loathing and admiration on the Palestinian street.

Despite his exile, Dahlan — with his meticulously coiffed hair and his immaculate suits — still has an important support base among Palestinians and has repeatedly accused Abbas of using “political verdicts” against him.

Even the mention of his name is known to anger Abbas and Dahlan’s supporters insist he is a serious contender to replace the ageing Palestinian leader, who turned 80 last month.

Born in 1961 in the Khan Younis refugee camp, Dahlan’s main power base is in the Gaza Strip, where he earned his reputation as a strongman.

During the first Palestinian uprising from 1987 to 1993, he was arrested by Israel and deported to Jordan and ended up joining the Palestine Liberation Organization which was then based in Tunis.

He returned to the Palestinian Territories with Yasser Arafat in 1994 after the signing of the Oslo Peace Accords and was appointed as head of the Gaza branch of the Palestinian Authority’s security arm.

Two years later, when the PA decided to put an end to suicide attacks on Israel, he ordered a ruthless crackdown on Hamas and fellow militant group Islamic Jihad.

Dahlan later took on the role of the president’s national security adviser until he stepped down in disgrace in July 2007.

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