Lite said
They're drop bombs on humanitarian aids.. not allowing baby formula is lite for them
Who is Yasser Abu Shabab?
Yasser Abu Shabab is reportedly a well-connected figure in Rafah with allegations of links to criminal activity. Haaretz reported that he had previously served time in Gazan prisons for various offences, including theft.
During a November 2024 interview with The Washington Post, he did not deny that his group had looted aid but claimed they avoided taking supplies meant for children.
The European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) described Abu Shabab as the head of a "criminal gang operating in the Rafah area that is widely accused of looting aid trucks". His brother was reportedly killed by Hamas during crackdowns on attacks against UN aid convoys, and the group itself has been expelled from some tribal alliances due to accusations of collaboration with Israel and for thefts of humanitarian aid.
Ties to the Islamic State group and criminals
Arabic sources have also drawn attention to the group's ideological leanings. According to The New Arab's Arabic sister outlet Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, the militia evolved from a loosely organised criminal gang into a Salafi-jihadist group inspired by the Islamic State group.
The report claims Abu Shabab and his men were involved in drug and arms trafficking, often crossing the border between Gaza and Egypt’s Sinai region, where IS-affiliated groups have operated for years.
Haaretz also reported that Lieberman directly linked the group to IS, saying: "The Hamasha clan are in essence lawless criminals who in recent years wanted to give themselves an ideological angle or spin, so they became Salafi [jihadists] and began identifying with ISIS."
Though the group now brands itself as an "anti-terror" force, locals see little distinction between their behaviour and that of organised crime syndicates. Al-Araby Al-Jadeed also reported that the group rebranded from the Anti-Terrorism Unit to The Popular Forces in May 2025 - possibly to obscure its affiliations.
Israel’s response, 'What’s bad about that?'
The Israeli government has not denied the allegations. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed the strategy, telling the public broadcaster Kan: "What did Liberman leak? That security sources activated a clan in Gaza that opposes Hamas? What is bad about that? It is only good - it is saving the lives of Israeli soldiers."
Security analyst Michael Milshtein, from the Moshe Dayan Centre in Tel Aviv, described the decision to support Abu Shabab’s group as "a fantasy, not something that you can really describe as a strategy". Speaking to AFP, Milshtein noted that the group had been denounced by its own tribal leaders as "collaborators and gangsters", and said the Israeli army was offering them "weapons, money and shelter" in exchange for destabilising Hamas-controlled areas.
[see photo]