The Palestinian ambassador in Prague died after being fatally injured in an explosion which took place when he opened a safe. An embassy spokesman denied reports the safe stayed untouched for more than 20 years, saying it was used “on a daily basis.”
Ambassador Jamal al-Jamal, 56, died several hours after being
taken to the hospital.
The blast occurred before midday on New Year’s Day at the
ambassador’s residence, part of the newly constructed Palestinian
Embassy complex, in the Suchdol neighborhood, which houses many
foreign diplomatic missions.
The Palestinian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the
blast happened when the diplomat tried to open a safe that had
been moved from the embassy's old offices, the Palestinian news
agency WAFA reported.
There is no evidence that the explosion was a terrorist attack,
police spokeswoman Andrea Zoulova said shortly after the blast.
She added that the explosive might have been part of the security
mechanism on the safe.
"The possibilities include inexpert handling of an explosive
device or its spontaneous detonation,” Reuters reported her
as saying. “The device was in a safe and was triggered after
the door of the safe was opened. The police are not ruling out
that the device was a part of the safe.”
Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Malki said that the safe had originally come from a building that used to house the Palestinian Liberation Organization’s offices in the 1980s, at a time when the PLO had close contacts with Eastern bloc countries, including Czechoslovakia.
“It was in one of the corners. No one had touched it for 20
to 25 years,” Malki said, AP reported. He added there was no
one but the ambassador and his wife at the residence when the
blast occurred.
“The ambassador wanted to know what was in the safe,”
Malki said. “He opened it and asked his wife to bring a paper
and a pen to write down the contents of the safe. She left him to
bring [the] pen and paper. During that time, she heard the sound
of an explosion.”
However, Palestinian Embassy spokesman Nabil El-Fahel said Malki
had misspoken, and told Reuters the safe had been in regular use.
“The safe was being used almost daily for depositing money...
used for salaries of embassy staff, for buying items for daily
operations,” Fahel said.
“Minister Malki had mistakenly spoken about a second safe...
that was empty and almost never used,” he added.
Shortly after the blast, Jamal al-Jamal was brought to the Prague
Military Hospital, where he was placed in a medically-induced
coma. The injuries to his head, chest and abdomen proved fatal.
Al-Jamal’s wife, 52, was also taken to hospital where she was
treated for shock and quickly released.
A team of officials from the Palestinian Authority arrived in
Prague on Thursday to help investigate the Jamal’s death.
Palestinian officials earlier said that no foul play was
suspected in the case.
“He became ambassador not long ago, last October,”
Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian MP, told RT. “There are no
indications that he could be specifically targeted by
anybody.”
Malki, the Palestinian Foreign Minister, said al-Jamal took some
of the contents out of the safe before the blast went off. The
details concerning them have not yet been disclosed.