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Egypt closes
breached border with Gaza
Middle East Desk Report
RAFAH (Gaza Strip)—Egyptian troops closed the last breach in Egypt’s
border with the Gaza Strip Sunday, ending 11 days of free movement for
Palestinian residents of the blockaded territory, witnesses and Hamas
security officials said.
Hamas police aided with the closure, drawing pistols and arresting
Palestinians who were throwing stones at Egyptian troops along the
frontier. It was a dramatic turnabout for Hamas, whose militants had
used explosives to bring down the border wall.
The Egyptian troops were allowing Gazans and Egyptians to cross the
border to return to their homes on the other side but prevented any new
cross-border movement, according to witnesses and Hamas security
officials in the border town of Rafah. The Hamas officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the
press. Israel issued no immediate comment on the closure.
Egyptian soldiers patrolled in armored personnel carriers and stood in
sandbagged emplacements on nearby rooftops, and dozens of Gazans looked
on as the Egyptians resealed the border.
About 100 Egyptian police formed a human cordon at the border wall’s
main gate. Dozens of cars and people lined up on either side of the
border, some having stocked up on supplies before crossing.
Three Palestinians tried to jump over the border wall to enter Egypt to
retrieve some merchandise they had stored there. Hamas security, which
were patrolling the area in cars and on foot, beat them with batons and
the backs of their weapons, then fired in the air to disperse the crowd
that had gathered to watch. Hamas militants blew up section of the
Gaza-Egypt border wall on Jan. 23 in an attempt to end a seven-month
blockade imposed on Gaza by Israel with Egypt’s cooperation. The move
allowed hundreds of thousands of Gazans to pour into Egypt to stock up
on supplies and visit with friends and relatives they hadn’t seen for
years.
Aisha Abu Jazar, a 65-year-old Egyptian woman who was waiting to leave
Gaza on Sunday, had last seen her son and daughter who live there five
years ago, and had never met their children.
“I am so happy because I saw my children and I enjoyed the warmth of the
family gathering with them after so many years. “I’m a sick woman and
this was one of my dearest wishes,’ said Abu Jazar, who is suffering
from leukemia.
A senior Hamas leader said Saturday after meeting with Egyptian
officials that Egypt would close the border in coordination with the
militant group, which seized control of the territory in June.
But Mahmoud Zahar said the closure would be temporary while the
Egyptians search for a way to reopen the border. Egyptian officials were
not available for comment on the Hamas claims. It was not clear whether
Egypt was considering the group’s demand for a say in running the
Egypt-Gaza border. Any role for the Islamic militants on the border
would be sure to anger the international community and Hamas’ archrival,
the moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, because it would
amount to tacit recognition of Hamas rule in Gaza. Hamas’ violent
seizure control of the tiny seaside territory, home to 1.5 million
Palestinians, left Abbas controlling only the West Bank. Hamas thwarted
repeated attempts by Egypt to reseal the frontier as Palestinians
flooded over the border.
On Saturday, Egyptian security forces arrested two Palestinians carrying
a bomb in el-Massoura, a village about 2.5 miles west of the border with
Gaza, a Sinai security official said on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to talk to the media. A police official in Cairo
said the two had been trying to reach beach resorts in the southern
Sinai.
On Friday, a Sinai intelligence official said Egyptian security forces
were looking for four Palestinians who slipped into the country from
Gaza and were suspected of planning suicide attacks against resorts. It
was not clear if the two men arrested Saturday were those Egypt had been
tracking.
At least 17 Palestinians have been arrested in the past days carrying
weapons and explosives near the border and other remote parts of the
Sinai desert. There is no fence along the desert border between Israel
and Egypt and Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Sunday a barrier
should be constructed.
“Building a fence on the Israel-Egypt border is a pressing need,” Barak
told an Israeli Cabinet meeting, saying the move would protect Israel
from militant infiltrations and cross-border smuggling.
According to Zahar, Egypt agreed to coordinate with Hamas on some border
issues and to enable thousands of Palestinians stuck in Egypt to head to
third countries for which they have visas or residency permits.
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