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Czech police: Palestinian ambassador killed by blast at Prague home | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Police and firefighters at the scene of a blast at the residence of Palestine ambassador, Jamal al-Jamal, in Prague, Czech Republic, 01 January 2014 (EPA/FILIP SINGER).


Police and firefighters at the scene of a blast at the residence of Palestine ambassador, Jamal al-Jamal, in Prague, Czech Republic, 01 January 2014 (EPA/FILIP SINGER).

Police and firefighters at the scene of a blast at the residence of Palestine ambassador, Jamal al-Jamal, in Prague, Czech Republic, 01 January 2014 (EPA/FILIP SINGER).

Prague, Reuters—The Palestinian ambassador to Prague was killed in an explosion at his residence on Wednesday that Czech authorities believe was probably an accident.

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry said ambassador Jamal Al-Jamal had been trying to open a safe that was recently moved to his new home and a Czech government source told Reuters that the explosion was probably caused by a security device on the unit.

It was unclear what that was. Some safes can be fitted with mechanisms designed to destroy secret documents in the event of the lock being tampered with. The Czech source said the government did not believe it was a terrorist attack.

Czech police said the ambassador died of his injuries in hospital after the explosion on the morning of New Year’s Day in the two-story suburban residence. No one else was injured, police said, although Jamal’s family was at home at the time.

No signs of damage to the house was visible from the street.
“There has been a detonation of a so far unidentified explosive mixture,” police spokeswoman Andrea Zoulova said. “The ambassador was … taken to hospital with serious injuries.”

She later said he had died.

A Palestinian official told Reuters in the West Bank administrative center Ramallah: “This explosion happened at his house. He recently moved there.”

The official Palestinian news agency WAFA, citing a Foreign Ministry statement, said the blast happened when Jamal tried to open a safe that had been moved from the embassy’s old offices.

Police cordoned off part of the street and a half dozen police vehicles, firetrucks and two ambulances were there.

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry said it would send a delegation to Prague “to help with the investigation”.