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No renewal of truce with Israel: Hamas
Middle East Desk Report
GAZA CITY (Gaza Strip)—Hamas said Wednesday the Islamic militant group
would not renew an informal 9-month-old truce, which expires at the end
of the year, after Israel killed one of its leading activists in an
airstrike in Gaza. The truce was brokered by Egypt which is expected to
invite militant groups, including Hamas, to Cairo in coming weeks to
discuss extending the agreement.
During the past nine months, violence has dropped sharply, and Hamas
refrained from carrying out suicide bombings in Israel. But it has
repeatedly fired rockets from Gaza at Israeli towns, in what it said was
retaliation for Israeli truce violations, such as airstrikes and deadly
arrest raids. On Tuesday, a Hamas activist and a top fugitive from
another armed group were killed in an Israeli airstrike in a Gaza
refugee camp.
“In the face of this Zionist aggression, no one should dream about the
renewal of this truce,” said a Hamas spokesman, Mushir al-Masri. Hamas
reserves the right to retaliate for the attack, though it won’t pull out
of the truce right now, he said. Violence continued Wednesday. Israeli
troops entered the northern West Bank town of Qabatiyeh and killed Rafat
Turkman, an Al Aqsa martyrs’ Brigades militant, as he tried to escape,
residents said. The military said soldiers fired back at gunmen, hitting
three.
Israel, meanwhile, ratcheted up its demands for a crackdown on
militants, saying Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas must arrest gunmen,
not only disarm them. In the West Bank, an Israeli soldier was killed
during a roundup of militants near Jenin, the army spokesman said. In
the same operation, an Islamic Jihad militant involved in a suicide
bombing in Israel last week was arrested, the army said.
More than a week of violence, including Israeli assassinations of
militants and the suicide bombing, has hurt hopes for a return to
peacemaking following Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza in September. In an
airstrike Tuesday, missiles slammed into a car carrying Hassan Madhoun,
a leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, a violent offshoot of Abbas’
Fatah party, who was involved in a bombing at the Israeli port of Ashdod.
Israel had been pressuring Abbas to arrest Madhoun since the beginning
of the year, providing the gunman’s address and cellular phone number.
At Sharon’s urging, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also
brought up Madhoun with Abbas, Israeli officials have said. The other
man killed in the airstrike was rocket expert Fawzi Abu Kara of Hamas,
who the military said was not a target.
At funerals on Wednesday for the two militants, gunmen fired in the air
and one carried a rocket launcher. Calls for revenge blared from
loudspeakers, and chants of “Death to Israel, yes to resistance,” rose
from the crowds. Militant factions interpret the cease-fire to mean they
can respond to individual Israeli attacks while remaining committed to
the truce, a position Abbas has dismissed as unacceptable. Since the
truce, Hamas and Al Aqsa have refrained from carrying out attacks in
Israel, while Islamic Jihad has been responsible for four suicide
bombings.
Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said Wednesday that operations
against militants would stop once Abbas, widely known as Abu Mazen,
decides to disarm them. “We said very clearly that if we leave Gaza, any
(militant) operation would draw a very tough Israeli reaction,” Shalom
said. “If Abu Mazen would make the strategic decision that he has
refused to make, to dismantle terror organizations and prevent them from
carrying out activity from the Gaza Strip, believe me, on that same day
all the operations in Gaza will stop”. |