1933 - 1991
Palestine Liberation Organization leader, also known as Abu Iyad.
Born in Jaffa to a religious Muslim family, Salah Khalaf fled to Gaza during the 1948 Arab - Israel War. After 1951, he attended the University of Cairo, where he joined Yasir Arafat's Palestinian Students Union. He and Arafat founded the alFatah organization in Kuwait, where Khalaf was working as a schoolmaster in the 1960s. Khalaf played a leading role in the fighting of Black September in 1970, participated in the Lebanese Civil War in the late 1970s, and was linked to several violent and terrorist incidents in the 1970s and 1980s. By the late 1980s he had emerged as the second most powerful leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), in charge of intelligence and security.
Khalaf was killed 14 January 1991 in the Tunis suburb of Carthage at the villa of Abd al-Hamid Hʾil (Abu al-Hawl) (the Fatah security chief). The gunman was Hamza Abu Zayd, a guard stationed at the villa. Khalaf had married the daughter of a wealthy Palestinian businessman, with whom he had six children. He was author of a widely read memoir, My Home, My Land, written with Eric Rouleau.
Bibliography
Becker, Jillian. The PLO: The Rise and Fall of the Palestine Liberation Organization. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1984.
Livingstone, Neil C., and Halevy, David. Inside the PLO:Covert Units, Secret Funds, and the War against Israel and the United States. New York: Morrow, 1990.
— ELIZABETH THOMPSON




