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Israel kills
3 Palestinians in WB
Middle East Desk Report
NABLUS (West Bank)—Israeli forces killed two Palestinian gunmen and a
teenager in the occupied West Bank on Friday, pressing ahead with raids
against militants despite a halt to cross-border rocket salvoes from the
Gaza Strip.
A week-long wave of violence has cast a shadow over Palestinian
municipal elections, preliminary results of which suggested Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas’s ruling Fatah faction had made a strong
showing. Militant group Hamas also made inroads. The flare-up has frayed
a seven-month-old ceasefire and deflated hopes that Israel’s Gaza
pullout might open the way for a revival of peacemaking. Abbas urged
Palestinian factions to show restraint but said “the Israelis should
know that these incidents cannot be tolerated.”
“These provocations and the continuation of these acts certainly have a
great and grave influence on the entire calm which we are exerting all
efforts in order to maintain,” Abbas told reporters outside his
Gaza office on Friday.
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, part of Fatah, said two fighters died in an
army raid on Balata refugee camp in Nablus. Troops later shot dead a
13-year-old stone-thrower in nearby Askar camp, witnesses said. The
Israeli army said Palestinians fired first and troops responded after
swooping on the camps before dawn to arrest militants. One soldier was
slightly wounded in the raids.
On Thursday, Israeli troops shot dead three gunmen in West Bank raids.
Hundreds of suspected militants have been detained by Israeli forces in
sweeps in the territory over the past week. The rocket fire that led to
the Israeli offensive, which has included artillery and missile attacks
in the Gaza Strip, abated on Tuesday in response to pleas from the
Palestinian public for calm to enable reconstruction after 38 years of
occupation. But Israel has kept up the heat. Around 4,000 children
gathered on Friday near the former Jewish settlement of Netzarim in Gaza
to commemorate the killing of two Palestinian boys in the area near the
start of a 2000 uprising. The rally was organized by militant group
Islamic Jihad. The latest bloodshed came hours after Palestinians
finished voting in a third round of local elections in the West Bank —
widely seen as a test of political clout for Hamas ahead of a
parliamentary ballot in January.
Fatah won control of 65 of the 104 municipal councils up for grabs
compared with 22 for Hamas and 17 for other factions, said Firas Yaghi,
executive director of the Higher Commission for Local Elections. Turnout
was 85 percent. The performance of Fatah, which has been struggling to
overcome public dissatisfaction with corruption and mismanagement in the
Palestinian Authority, was better relative to Hamas than in two previous
rounds. Hamas said the preliminary figures did not reflect its
grassroots popularity, noting that its candidates did not run in some
districts for fear of arrest by Israel.
Official figures are due on Saturday. The local elections could signal
Hamas’s strength in the coming legislative vote. Hamas, which is sworn
to Israel’s destruction, boycotted the only previous parliamentary
ballot in 1996. Thursday’s ballot was the first Palestinian vote since
Israel completed its Gaza pullout on September 12. Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon has vowed Israel will keep West Bank settlement blocs much larger
than its former Gaza enclaves.
Hamas, the driving force behind suicide bombings against Israelis during
five years of a Palestinian uprising before it agreed to a truce in
February at Abbas’s behest, did well in the two earlier phases of
municipal voting. |