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ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

Analysis

How murder of Naji Salim Hussain Al-Ali led Thatcher to shut Mossad

Cartoonist Naji Salim Hussain Al-Ali was shot in the neck at point-blank range in July 1987

September 1, 2017 15:38
Naji Salim Hussain Al-Ali
2 min read

The Metropolitan Police decision this week to reinvestigate the murder of a renowned Palestinian cartoonist on a London street 30 years ago may help to shed new light on a murky, unsolved crime which eventually led to Israeli diplomats being kicked out of Britain.

Naji Salim Hussain Al-Ali, a cartoonist for the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Qabas, was shot in the neck at point-blank range on 22 July 1987 in Knightsbridge and died a month later on August 29.

Witnesses later described his assassin — a young man of Middle Eastern appearance — running from the scene before escaping in a silver Mercedes.

Al-Ali’s enemies were certainly numerous. Born in a Galilee village in 1938, he later grew up in a south Lebanon refugee camp and was a fierce advocate of the Palestinian cause. His most famous cartoon character — Handala, a barefoot Palestinian boy who rarely showed his face — appeared in many of Al-Ali’s cartoons and remains a popular symbol of Palestinian desperation and defiance.