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– Is the Cease-Fire Doomed?
Hamas Calls for New Terror Attacks on Israel
Fox News
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Hamas militants called Sunday for a fresh wave
of attacks against Israel after troops killed nine Palestinians in
weekend fighting, straining a five-month-old cease-fire.
In response to the bloodshed, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' more
moderate Fatah movement urged him to consider breaking off contacts with
the Israeli government, despite his pledge to the United States to hold
regular meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Hamas and
Fatah are partners in a coalition government.
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Among the nine Palestinians killed in the weekend upsurge of violence
were two gunmen and a 17-year-old who died Sunday in the West Bank. The
fighting also included a Palestinian rocket attack on the southern
Israeli town of Sderot that damaged a home.
Israeli officials defended the killings as part of operations that have
drastically reduced the number of attacks against Israelis. Palestinian
officials, however, said that the deaths jeopardized their efforts to
expand the Gaza truce to the West Bank.
Hamas, which has killed scores of Israelis in homicide bombings, sought
to rally other Palestinian militant groups in a new offensive that would
shatter the truce in the Gaza Strip.
"The blood of our people is not cheap," a Hamas statement said, inviting
Palestinians of every ideological stripe to unite and "use all possible
means of resistance and to respond to the massacres."
Fatah also called for measures against Israel. "The Arab and the
Palestinian leadership should evaluate the contacts with Olmert's
government and reconsider these contacts and meetings," Fatah spokesman
Abu Hakim Alwad said at a news conference. "Israel is sabotaging the
efforts made by the president to maintain calm and to strengthen the
cease-fire."
Miri Eisin, a spokeswoman for Olmert, said Israel "reaches out for
peace, while at the same time we will always consistently fight against
terror." Israel will continue its operations against Palestinian
militants, she said, while "always doing our utmost to avoid any
innocent casualties."
Troops killed the Palestinian teenager Sunday in a village near Ramallah.
Palestinian officials said he was throwing stones at an Israeli patrol
when he was shot. The army said soldiers opened fire as the youth was
about to throw a firebomb at a military jeep.
Earlier, an army task force raided the militant stronghold of Nablus,
killing two Palestinian gunmen, including Amin Lubadi, a top bombmaker
who had been wanted by Israel for more than three years. The army said
an Israeli soldier was lightly wounded in the battle.
In unrelated violence late Sunday, four Palestinians were killed in
Gaza, two in a gunfight among family members and two others in
apparently random shootings by criminals, security officials said. Also,
shadowy Islamic groups sent warnings to cigarette dealers to destroy
their wares and to barbers to close their shops.
Internal violence has plagued Gaza for most of the time since Israel
pulled out in 2005. Some has pitted Hamas and Fatah forces against each
other, while other incidents involve family disputes or crime.
After weeks of relative quiet, the latest surge in violence began on
Saturday, when five people were killed during Israeli arrest raids in
the northern West Bank.
Palestinian officials said one of the dead was a 17-year-old girl shot
by troops as she stood at the window of her home. The army said its
soldiers had returned fire from a gunman in a window, but said the
incident was being investigated.
In the Gaza Strip on Saturday, Palestinians fired a rocket at the
Israeli town of Sderot, hitting a house but causing no injuries. The
army subsequently attacked a car it said was carrying the attackers,
killing a 37-year-old man. Palestinian officials said he was a civilian.
The Gaza truce has largely held, though militants have frequently fired
rockets into Israel and have attacked Israeli patrols along the border
fence. Olmert's government has warned it will not tolerate continued
rocket fire.
Israel is still in control of the West Bank, and unlike Gaza, that
territory is dotted with Jewish settlements, making a cease-fire there a
different issue. Israel has been reluctant to agree to a West Bank
truce, concerned that militant groups would take advantage of it to hit
settlers and prepare attacks in Israel.
Israel sealed the West Bank and Gaza Strip early Sunday ahead of the
country's Memorial Day for fallen soldiers, restricting the movement of
Palestinians into Israel.
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