Mohammed Dahlan

An exiled rival to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was sentenced in absentia to three years in prison Wednesday on corruption charges, his lawyer said.
A lawyer for Mohammed Dahlan condemned the sentencing as part of Abbas’s attempts to sideline political rivals.
Dahlan 55, “was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay back $16 million (15 million euros),” lawyer Salameh Halaseh told AFP by phone.
Halaseh said the defense had only been informed of the hearing, held in an anti-corruption court in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, on Tuesday.
Dahlan was expelled from Abbas’s Fatah party in 2011 and now lives in exile in the UAE.
Sevag Torossian, another lawyer for Dahlan, called the conviction a “cleansing exercise” for Abbas, who has sought to sideline perceived rivals in Fatah. Dahlan, who has urged 81-year-old Abbas to step down, is believed to have the support of a number of Arab countries.
The conviction came two days after Abbas lifted the immunity of five members of the Palestinian Parliament, including Dahlan, opening them up to prosecution.
Torossian said the case had been going on for years but the charges were struck down in 2015 when a Palestinian court ruled he was immune from prosecution as a parliamentarian. But last month, the Palestinian Constitutional Court ruled that Abbas has the authority to revoke immunity without the consent of Parliament.
Palestinian shot dead
A Palestinian stabbed an Israeli policeman with a screwdriver, slightly wounding him, in East Jerusalem on Wednesday, and the assailant was shot and killed by police, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. The attack occurred inside the walled Old City in East Jerusalem. Police released a photo of a screwdriver.
“The terrorist was shot by police units that responded. The policeman was treated at the scene for minor injuries,” the spokesman said. The Palestinian Health Ministry said the assailant died in hospital.
Palestinians have accused Israeli police and soldiers of using excessive force against assailants, saying many could have been stopped or detained without being killed.

Source: Arab News