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Two policemen killed in Gaza
GAZA CITY (Gaza Strip)—Hamas gunmen killed two Palestinian policemen
loyal to the rival Fatah movement early Wednesday, hours after the sides
agreed to a new cease-fire meant to end more than a week of factional
fighting.
Fatah officials condemned the killing but said they remained committed
to the truce, and Gaza City remained largely calm at midday — a dramatic
contrast to the pitched battles that raged in city streets a day
earlier. However, hundreds of people went on a violent rampage at the
policemen’s funeral, raising the prospect of renewed fighting.
Fatah spokesman Tawfiq Abu Khoussa said the policeman, cousins in their
early 20s, were killed when their vehicle was attacked during an
overnight patrol. Six other people in their car were wounded, he said.
“They came under fire from an ambush of masked gunmen affiliated with
Hamas,” Abu Khoussa said. He said Fatah considered the shooting a
violation of the cease-fire, but would still honor the truce, announced
just before midnight by President Mahmoud Abbas. “Fatah is still
committed to the agreement and to the announcement by President Abbas
last night,” he said.
Hamas’ Web site described the fatal shooting as “an intense gunbattle
... between Fatah and the (Hamas) executive unit.” It said “the identity
and the affiliation of the people killed is still unknown.” About 300
people attended the officers’ funeral Wednesday. Many of the men were
armed, shooting in the air and calling for revenge.
At one point, the funeral procession passed by the house of Foreign
Minister Mahmoud Zahar, a top Hamas official, and mourners shouted
epithets. Zahar apparently was not in the area at the time.
The crowd later went on a rampage on a main Gaza road on the way to the
cemetery to bury the bodies, shooting at the local electricity company
building after seeing Hamas gunmen on the roof, witnesses and a security
official said. The crowd also torched four cars resembling the type of
vehicle used by Hamas.
The Hamas gunmen on the roof did not fire back, the witnesses and
security official said. Two TV cameramen filming the incident said they
were roughed up by protesters, who also confiscated and smashed their
videotapes.
Elsewhere in Gaza, life appeared to be returning to normal. Cars and
donkey carts were back on the streets, and people were running errands.
Despite the signs of normalcy, the situation remained tense. Gaza’s
three universities and schools across the coastal strip were closed
Wednesday after schoolchildren were caught in the crossfire the previous
day. Many parents kept their children indoors, fearing renewed
gunbattles.
Streets around the beachside residence and office of Abbas were closed,
with security guards manning roadblocks. Meanwhile, black-clad guards of
Hamas’ militia were posted on the rooftop of a complex of ministries run
by Hamas.
In a show of unity, the families of two men killed in the fighting — one
Hamas, the other Fatah — held a joint news conference urging calm and
Palestinian unity.
“We are prepared to forgive ... for the sake of our people,” said
Mohammed Harazin, whose son, a pro-Fatah intelligence officer, was
abducted Tuesday and killed by Hamas.
Tuesday’s fighting was some of the heaviest yet in the latest round of
violence. But late in the evening, Abbas announced a new truce deal. The
agreement came shortly after Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas
appealed for calm in a televised speech, urging the Palestinians to band
together to fight the common enemy: Israel.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert expressed hope that the
cease-fire would stick, making his first public comments on the
Palestinian crisis.—Agencies |