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Friday,
September 28, 2001
Clashes
kill Palestinians, test cease-fire
By Steve Weizman
Associated Press
JERUSALEM
A fledgling truce between Israel and the Palestinians
was severely tested Thursday by clashes that killed five Palestinians
and wounded 22 on the eve of the first anniversary of the
Palestinian uprising.
The
cease-fire faces fresh challenges on Friday, when several
radical Palestinian groups opposed to compromise with Israel
plan mass protests to mark one year since the start of the
uprising that has claimed the lives of 647 people on the Palestinian
side and 177 on the Israeli side.
The
latest fighting came despite pledges by both sides to enforce
the truce, sought by the United States as it tries to bring
Arab and Muslim states into its anti-terror coalition.
Palestinians
accused Israel of trying to undermine a truce agreement reached
on Wednesday between Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
Its
an attempt by the Israeli army and some people inside the
Israeli government to blow up and destroy the results of the
Peres-Arafat meeting and we hold the Israeli government responsible
for this dangerous escalation, said Arafat spokesman
Nabil Abu Rdeneh.
An
official in Prime Minister Ariel Sharons office said
the Israeli troops were responding to a Palestinian bomb attack
Wednesday on an army post in the Gaza Strip.
At
Wednesdays meeting, Peres and Arafat agreed to resume
security cooperation and take a series of confidence-building
measures. Israel promised to ease its stifling closures of
Palestinian communities in the coming days.
The
army said it demolished several homes in the Gaza Strips
Rafah refugee camp in response to a bomb attack Wednesday
on an Israeli army post on the edge of the camp, along the
Israeli-Egyptian border. Three soldiers were wounded in the
blast, for which the Islamic militant group Hamas claimed
responsibility.
Just
before midnight Wednesday, Israeli tanks and a bulldozer moved
toward Rafah as troops fired from tank-mounted machine guns
at the camp, Palestinian security officials said. Tanks also
fired shells, the officials said.
Palestinian
gunmen returned fire, and the fighting lasted for more than
three hours, the officials said.
Three
camp residents were killed and 22 wounded, including four
who were in serious condition, doctors said. Tanks drove about
100 yards into Palestinian territory during the raid, Palestinian
security officials said.
There
had been no attacks on soldiers before the incursion, the
army said.
Later
in the day, troops manning a watchtower next to Rafah shot
and killed a 14-year-old boy, said Ali Musa, a doctor at the
local hospital.
Elsewhere
in the Gaza Strip, Israeli troops shot a Palestinian man in
the head near the town of Deir el Balah, a Palestinian security
official said. The wounded man died in a hospital.
Palestinian
police patrolled Rafah hot spots Thursday, where a general
strike was declared and the towns population gathered
for the funeral of those killed during the fighting.
The
army denied it entered a Palestinian area, saying the houses
demolished were in a buffer zone near the border that is under
Israeli security control. It said it
demolished
several houses that had served as cover for weapons smugglers
and that underneath one house, soldiers found the entrance
to a tunnel the army said was used in the attack on the military
outpost a day earlier.
The
Rafah refugee camp has been a trouble spot throughout the
past year of Israeli-Palestinian fighting.
The
camp was singled out in the Peres-Arafat meeting.
We
told them (the Palestinians) that we would rebuild the army
post which was destroyed at Rafah, Peres said. They
(the Palestinians) said they would send a very serious force
to Rafah in order to put a halt to the shooting there.
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