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SAT . Hamas carries out public executions — just hours after signing peace treaty with Israel .

Hamas carried out mass public executions in Gaza on Monday, just hours after signing a peace treaty with Israel — as part of a series of bloody reprisals following the withdrawal of Israeli troops, gruesome video shows.

The graphic footage shows eight badly beaten, blindfolded men kneeling in the street before each is shot dead by Hamas gunmen in front of a cheering crowd.

The terror group said, without providing evidence, that the killings targeted “criminals and collaborators with Israel,” the BBC reported.

Masked militants appearing to execute eight people on a busy street in Gaza City.
Masked Hamas gunmen executed eight people on a busy street in Gaza City just one day after a cease-fire went into effect. Storyful

Among those killed was Ahmad Zidan al-Tarabin, reportedly responsible for recruiting agents to a rival non-Hamas-aligned militia, Israeli outlet ynet News reported.

Following the IDF’s withdrawal, Hamas has quickly looked to reassert its control over Gaza, targeting the “clans,” or family-based armed groups that had gained strength during the conflict.

The Palestinian terror group began its deadly reprisals before the peace deal was even signed.

On Sunday, 52 members of the powerful Dagmoush clan were killed in clashes with Hamas’ internal security forces, while 12 Hamas terrorists, including the son of senior official Bassem Naim, also died, according to reports in Gaza.

Hamas militants reportedly used ambulances to storm the neighborhood of the clan, whom they accused of collaboration with Israel.

Militants appearing to execute eight people in Gaza City.
Among those killed were a man who reportedly helped recruit agents to a rival non-Hamas-aligned militia. Storyful

“It’s a massacre. They’re dragging people away, children are screaming and dying, they’re burning our houses. What did we do wrong?” one clan member’s daughter told Ynet News.

Earlier on Monday, President Trump suggested he had given Hamas approval to manage internal security in Gaza “as it sees fit,” as part of a peace deal to return the remaining living hostages to Israel.

“They [Hamas] do want to stop the problems, and they’ve been open about it, and we gave them approval for a period of time,” he told a reporter on Air Force One.

A heavy machinery bulldozer clearing debris from a street in Gaza City, with damaged buildings in the background.
Heavy machinery removes debris from a Gaza street after the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, October 14, 2025. REUTERS
Masked Hamas gunman guarding ICRC vehicles transporting released Israeli hostages.
ICRC vehicles carrying released Israeli hostages make their way through groups of Palestinians and Hamas gunmen on their way to the Israeli border, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. AP
Hamas gunmen on vehicles escort buses with freed Palestinian prisoners, cheered by crowds in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip.
Hamas quickly looked to reassert its control over Gaza after the IDF’s withdrawal. AP

“You have close to 2 million people going back to buildings that have been demolished, and a lot of bad things can happen. So we want it to be — we want it to be safe. I think it’s going to be fine. Who knows for sure,” he said.

Under Trump’s peace plan, Hamas was expected to disarm and surrender governance of Gaza, something the terror group has refused to do.

With Post wires

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