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Fresh Israeli Hit-and-Run Attacks in Jenin, Bethlehem

Israeli tanks have been going in and out of Jenin at will.

JENIN, West Bank, June 7 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A column of Israeli tanks stormed into the Palestinian city of Jenin in the northern West Bank early Friday morning, June 7, with their machine guns blazing, Palestinian security sources said, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

The latest incursion came hours after the Israeli army pulled out of Jenin Thursday, June 6, following a reoccupation of the battered refugee camp in which tanks and troops rolled in.

Just hours earlier Thursday, Israeli helicopter gunships had raided the West Bank town of Ramallah as tanks returned to the town where they trashed Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's headquarters.

Meanwhile, early Friday, June 7, an armored unit of the Israeli occupation army entered the autonomous Palestinian West Bank town of Bethlehem , residents said, quoted by AFP.

The sources said seven armored vehicles entered the town from the direction of the village of Al-Khader and then headed towards the Daheisheh refugee camp.

But an Israeli army spokesman denied there had been a military incursion in the Bethlehem area.

Meanwhile, an Israeli motorized patrol late Thursday entered the center of Hebron south of Bethlehem , witnesses said, AFP reported.

Four jeeps and an armored personnel carrier moved through the main streets and withdrew without meeting any opposition.

Israel stunned Ramallah residents Thursday with a ferocious hit-and-run attack by Israeli tanks and troops and bewildered them with its quick windup after the shocking devastation of the Palestinian President’s headquarters.

Mohammad Yaghi, a 37-year-old Palestinian civil servant, surveyed the damage wrought by Israeli occupation forces on Arafat's compound and shook his head.

"It's crazy," Yaghi said as he stood amid the rubble. "They [the Israeli occupation forces] don't know what they want."

"It's unbelievable. It's amazing," said a 42-year-old Palestinian import-export executive who gave his name only as Wael. "They [the Israeli occupation forces] come and they go and nobody's stopping it."

Arafat's Muqataa compound, where a five-week Israeli siege was lifted May 2, was stripped of all signs as the headquarters of a functioning government.

In less than six hours of intensive tank shelling and dynamiting, it was transformed into a tortured moonscape of mostly flattened buildings, crushed cars and debris, AFP reported.

One administrative building had its wall sheared away, exposing shelves of neatly stacked files. At least eight other structures were little more than listing piles of concrete slabs and roofing, some still smoldering.

Arafat's offices, three stories of sand-colored stucco, were further riddled by bullets and tank shells. The inside was a riot of downed ceiling tiles, broken furniture and glass, sandbags and rubbish, AFP added.

Arafat was unscathed, but got a taste of Israeli firepower up close and personal as shellfire wreaked havoc on his bedroom, bathroom and study while he was moved to a safer part of the building.

His bathroom and shower were destroyed and a huge hole punched in the wall that separated them from the 72-year-old Arafat's office. The mirror of his bedroom was shattered and shards of glass covered his dresser, said AFP.

The Palestinian President, looking drawn and somber, appeared at his doorway by mid-morning, weakly flashing the V-sign and vowing to continue the Palestinian resistance as some 100 supporters cheered and whistled.

"This will only increase the steadfastness of our people," Arafat said before conducting a 10-minute inspection of the destruction of his compound, which he said testified to Israeli "fascism and racism."

About 15 tanks and armored personnel carriers returned in the afternoon.

But in the morning, as the sun rose over the complex with no trace of an Israeli soldier or tank in sight, an almost festive air set in.

Scavengers young and old hauling away bits of scrap metal and cabling mixed with journalists interviewing Palestinian leaders and hawkers selling bread and ice cream.

Other Palestinians felt drawn to inspect the damage.

Several suggested the lightning Israeli attack was the last warning to the Palestinian President before Israel took action to expel him.

Few expressed fears of a prolonged occupation such as the siege launched on March 29.

"In the last invasion, they did all that they could do," said Yaghi, the administrator of the Palestinian ministry of parliamentary affairs.

But others said the raid was part of a new pattern of lower-level warfare adopted by the Israelis more than a month after the declared end of their major West Bank offensive.

"It's like an occupation with breaks at the weekend," Mustapha Barghuti, head of the Palestinian health union and a rights activist, told AFP.

"To sustain it [means] we are creating the worst kind of apartheid and building tens of Berlin Walls," he said, referring to Israel 's closure of West Bank cities and plans to turn them into cantons by building a fence around them.

Speculation was rife among Palestinian leaders as to whether Washington was giving its tacit approval to the Israelis to continue their offensives.

For Nabil Abu Rudeina, a close aide to Arafat, there was no doubt.

"So far the Israelis are enjoying a green light from the Americans," he told AFP. "The Americans must stop supporting and giving the green light to these operations."

 

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