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Abbas urges resistance groups to help rebuild Gaza
Hamas
threatens to kidnap Israeli soldiers
FORMER NETZARIM SETTLEMENT, Gaza
Strip: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas yesterday urged armed factions to
help rebuild the Gaza Strip rather than flex their military muscle as he toured
the ruins of Israel’s most hated former settlement.
Opening a water well amid the
rubble-scarred landscape of Netzarim, Abbas confirmed that resistance fighters
had agreed to stop all armed rallies and marches by tomorrow, stressing that now
was the time for a united reconstruction effort.
“All
factions will participate with the Palestinian Authority in the rebuilding,”
said Abbas, inaugurating a well to cater to some 3,000 Palestinians in the
village of Al Mughraqa near the former Netzarim settlement.
“It’s an important project to return
the greenery to all the Palestinian territories which have been destroyed and
bulldozed by Israel. We hope to be the first of all of our re-construction
projects,” Abbas said.
His tour of Netzarim, where armed
activists have been out in force since Israeli troops left the Gaza Strip on
September 12, follows talks with representatives of the main Palestinian
factions late on Wednesday.
“What is important is that we
decided Saturday will be the last day for military displays in the Gaza Strip
and to move on to rebuilding areas which were destroyed by Israel,” said Abbas.
Resistance factions, particularly
Hamas, have staged a number of large-scale rallies in the aftermath of Israel’s
departure from Gaza as they seek to claim credit for what they see as an act of
surrender.
A spokesman for Hamas said the
movement was planning to exhibit weapons and military memorabilia used in
attacks that it hails as instrumental in forcing Israel out of Gaza, in Neztarim
next Saturday.
In the West Bank, around 1,500 Hamas
supporters rallied in the town of Ramallah, including masked youths wearing fake
explosive belts and carrying makeshift rockets.
The crowds called on Israel to
release all Palestinian prisoners and end its occupation of all Palestinian
territory, including Arab East Jerusalem.
Under huge pressure from Israel and
the international community, Abbas has promised to end the armed chaos in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip where resistance groups such as Hamas operate largely
above the law.
US State Department officials have
criticised the Palestinian Authority’s performance on security as “far from
satisfactory” while underscoring the “very real challenges” facing the
Palestinian leadership.
Accompanied by Deputy Prime Minister
Nabil Shaath, but no leaders from the principal resistance groups Hamas and
Islamic Jihad, Abbas toured Netzarim, including its greenhouses, at least
partially destroyed by looters.
The Palestinian authorities have
said 800 of the 4,000 Gaza greenhouses have become unusable because of looters,
costing thousands of dollars in repairs before they can be resurrected as money
making opportunity.
Hamas has confirmed it has agreed to
end its celebratory military parades and armed marches in Gaza towns, but
refuses appeals from Abbas, Israel and the international community to disarm
before taking part in elections in January.
Behind the majority of anti-Israeli
attacks during the last five years of violence, Hamas is hoping to capitalise on
its strong showing in recent municipal elections and end the long domination of
the governing Fateh faction.
Israel has threatened to hamper the
election if Hamas stands despite being urged by Washington to cooperate in
organising the January 25 polls.
A Hamas leader yesterday threatened
to have Israeli soldiers kidnapped as bargaining chips for the release of
Palestinian prisoners at a rally celebrating the Gaza Strip pullout.
“All options are open, including the
kidnapping of Israeli soldiers to release our prisoners from Israeli prisoners,”
Hassan Yussef told a crowd of 1,500 in the Palestinian Authority’s political
capital.
Although the Israeli government has
freed 900 prisoners since Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Abbas met at an Egypt
peace summit in February, more than 7,000 still remain behind bars.
“No power on earth can take our
weapons from our hands: No one can deny our right to struggle,” shouted Yussef,
Hamas leader in the West Bank.
n DOTAN, West Bank: Israeli forces
yesterday evacuated an old army base in the northern West Bank, near the four
settlements it tore down during its pullout, and Palestinians entered the base
to celebrate, witnesses said.
The Dotan base was used as a staging
area for troops that hauled settlers and protesters out of two of the four
settlements last month. Settlers left the other two voluntarily. Witnesses said
Palestinian police shot three Palestinian scavengers in the legs.
Earlier yesterday Israeli soldiers
shot dead an unarmed Palestinian after he entered the army base which was being
dismantled.
The Israeli army said troops shot
the Palestinian at the Dotan military base after he failed to heed orders to
stop and because they thought he might be a suicide bomber, a fear that proved
unfounded.
Palestinian witnesses and security
sources said the man was hit in the chest after heading into the base to
scavenge for scrap metal. He was pronounced dead at a hospital in the
Palestinian-ruled town of Jenin, medics said.
An Israeli military commander said
troops had deployed heavily around the camp after repeated attempts by
Palestinians to infiltrate since troops began dismantling the base following the
removal of settlements. - Agencies |