Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed on Wednesday in an Israeli strike in Iran, the group said, in an act that has stunned the international community.
Israel has not commented on the death but many countries have warned that it will have a major impact on efforts to bring a ceasefire in the Gaza war. Here are the key reactions:
-- Palestinian president calls killing 'cowardly'
Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas is a rival of Haniyeh but slammed the killing as "cowardly".
"President Mahmoud Abbas of the State of Palestine strongly condemned the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, deeming it a cowardly act and a serious escalation," Abbas's office said in a statement.
"He urged our people and their forces to unite, remain patient, and stand firm against the Israeli occupation."
-- Iran vows to defend 'territorial integrity'
Haniyeh had been in Tehran to attend the inauguration of President Masoud Pezeshkian, who commented on the X social platform: "The Islamic Republic of Iran will defend its territorial integrity, honor, pride and dignity, and make the terrorist invaders regret their cowardly action."
-- Qatar and Turkey warn of 'chaos'
Haniyeh was based in Qatar, which has been a mediator in the Gaza conflict, but also spent time in Turkey after going into exile in 2017. Qatar's foreign ministry called the killing a "heinous crime" and "shameful assassination".
The ministry said the strike in Tehran was a "dangerous escalation" and "a flagrant violation of international and humanitarian law".
"This assassination and the reckless Israeli behavior of continuously targeting civilians in Gaza will lead to the region slipping into chaos and undermine the chances of peace".
Turkey echoed the condemnation. "We condemn the assassination of the leader of Hamas's political office, Ismail Haniyeh, in a shameful assassination in Tehran," the foreign ministry said, adding that "this attack also aims to spread the Gaza war to a regional dimension".
"Once again the (Benjamin) Netanyahu government has shown that it has no intention of achieving peace," the ministry said. "If the international community does not take measures to stop Israel, our region will face much larger conflicts."
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the "perfidious assassination" in Tehran of his close ally and "brother" Ismail Haniyeh.
"May God have mercy on my brother Ismail Haniyeh, fallen in martyrdom after this odious attack," Erdogan wrote on the X social media platform, denouncing "Zionist barbarity".
-- Russia and China condemn
Haniyeh went to Moscow in September 2022 for talks on the Israel-Palestinian conflict while Hamas and rival Palestinian faction Fatah held talks in Beijing last week.
"It is a completely unacceptable political assassination, and this will lead to a further escalation of tensions," Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency.
Konstantin Kosachev, the vice-president of Russia's upper house Federation Council, predicted a "sudden escalation of mutual hatred" in the Middle East.
China's foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said: "We are highly concerned about the incident and firmly oppose and condemn the assassination."
-- Hamas allies rally
Hamas allies in the region rallied around the Palestinian militants.
"The martyrdom of leader Haniyeh... will increase the determination and stubbornness of the mujahideen resistance fighters on all resistance fronts... and will make their resolve stronger in confronting the Zionist enemy," Lebanese militants Hezbollah, who are in a growing standoff with Israel, said in a statement.
The group described Haniyeh as "one of the great resistance leaders of our time who stood bravely against the American hegemony project and the Zionist occupation."
"Targeting him is a heinous terrorist crime and a flagrant violation of laws and ideal values," said Mohammed Ali al-Huthi, a member of the political bureau of Yemen's Huthi rebels who have staged rocket attacks on Israel. Afghanistan's Taliban rulers called Haniyeh's death "a great loss".
-- Syria warns attack could 'set region ablaze'
Syria's foreign ministry condemned the killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on Wednesday, blaming Israel and warning that the latest escalation could "set the entire region ablaze".
"Syria condemns this blatant Zionist aggression," the ministry said, describing Haniyeh's killing as a "despicable act" and adding it "considers that the continued disregard of international laws by the Israeli entity... may set the entire region ablaze".
-- Germany says 'logic of reprisals' in Middle East 'wrong path'
The German government on Wednesday called for restraint in the Middle East in the wake of separate Israeli strikes that killed Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh and targeted a Hezbollah commander.
"It is essential to avoid further escalation and a regional conflagration," German foreign ministry spokesman Sebastian Fischer told reporters, adding that "we call on all actors to exercise maximum restraint, the logic of tit-for-tat reprisals is the wrong path".
-- Blinken says Gaza ceasefire 'imperative'
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that a ceasefire in Gaza was the "imperative", after the killing of Hamas's political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran.
Speaking at a forum in Singapore, Blinken refused to comment directly on the killing of Haniyeh, but he said reaching a ceasefire in Gaza "is the enduring imperative".
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