Two bombs exploded simultaneously at UNRWA headquarters and near a Hamas police station Saturday night.
No one was injured, and no organization has take responsibility for the twin attacks. The bomb at UNRWA exploded “about ten feet from the door, causing no casualties or damage,” according to the U.N. agency’s spokesperson Adnan abu Hasna.
The second device blast was near the home of a Hamas public prosecutor.
The two attacks followed one on Friday that set on fire Hamas offices that are in the former home of Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas.
Hamas has been facing internal struggles, especially between the political and military echelon as well as eternal rivalry from other terrorist organizations.
A delegation of the so-called unity government of Hamas and Abbas’ Fatah movement is supposed to visit Gaza this week. There is no chance Ababa will visit and leave alive.
Hamas’ dire circumstances are reflected in the revival of a threat to kidnap Israelis and its rapid rebuilding of terror tunnels, thanks to financial aid from Qatar and Iran.
The bomb at UNRWA was aimed at the organization that one the one hand has imprisoned tens of thousands of Gazans with eternal hopelessness as “refugees’ and on the other hand has made them dependent on them to live. The bombs near Hamas’ office and the police station are aimed at getting rid of the terrorist regime so a different one can take over.
When things can’t get worse, Hamas tries to make the people feel good by ramping up for war on Israel.