Fatah official: Terrorist who planned Munich massacre was a "name and symbol that imposed fear on the enemies"
Headline: “Zaki on the anniversary of the death as a Martyr of Abu Hassan Salameh: He was great and imposed fear on the enemies of the revolution”
“Fatah Central Committee member Abbas Zaki said that commander Ali Hassan Salameh (i.e., commander of the Black September terror organization) was a name and symbol that imposed fear on the enemies of the Palestinian revolution.
Zaki added in an interview with Radio Mawtini today, Sunday [Jan. 22, 2017]: ‘Commander Martyr (Shahid) Salameh had wisdom and a strong will. He was one of the pioneers of the [Fatah] Movement leadership. He accepted the responsibility of the leadership and carried out the special missions. He was most determined to learn everything possible in order to impose fear on the enemies of the revolution.’”
Ali Hassan Salameh (son of Hassan Salameh, born 1940, killed Jan. 22, 1979, also called Abu Hassan) - Commander of operations of the Black September terror organization. He planned many terror attacks, including the attack on the Israeli team at the Munich Olympics in 1972, in which 11 Israeli athletes were murdered. (Deception p. 260)
“Fatah Central Committee member Abbas Zaki said that commander Ali Hassan Salameh (i.e., commander of the Black September terror organization) was a name and symbol that imposed fear on the enemies of the Palestinian revolution.
Zaki added in an interview with Radio Mawtini today, Sunday [Jan. 22, 2017]: ‘Commander Martyr (Shahid) Salameh had wisdom and a strong will. He was one of the pioneers of the [Fatah] Movement leadership. He accepted the responsibility of the leadership and carried out the special missions. He was most determined to learn everything possible in order to impose fear on the enemies of the revolution.’”
Ali Hassan Salameh (son of Hassan Salameh, born 1940, killed Jan. 22, 1979, also called Abu Hassan) - Commander of operations of the Black September terror organization. He planned many terror attacks, including the attack on the Israeli team at the Munich Olympics in 1972, in which 11 Israeli athletes were murdered. (Deception p. 260)