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Israel Expels Activists’ Kin, Hamas, Jihad Vow Continued Resistance

The Palestinian kin’s expulsion is "collective punishment contrary to international law and natural rights," said an Israeli rights group

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, August 13 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The Israeli occupation army prepared Tuesday, August 13, to expel to Gaza three brothers of Palestinians suspected of involvement in resistance activities against Israel, in a move that torpedoed Palestinian leadership efforts to broker a ceasefire by resistance groups.

An Israeli military court gave its approval late Monday, August 12, to the widely criticized policy of deporting the kin of wanted activists.

The three, whose brothers are suspected of involvement in a July ambush of a Jewish settler bus, have until 2:00 pm (1100 GMT) Tuesday to make a final appeal against their expulsion from the West Bank, said Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The Center for the Defense of the Individual, an Israeli rights group that provided the trio's legal counsel, said it would make the required appeal to the Israeli Supreme Court.

The Palestinian kin’s expulsion from the West Bank to the Gaza Strip would constitute "collective punishment contrary to international law and natural rights," said the rights group.

In a swift answer to the Israeli decision, the Islamic resistance movement Hamas vowed Tuesday to pursue its campaign against the Israeli occupation by all possible means, including suicide bombings, said AFP.

Islamic Jihad echoed Hamas' refusal to sign up to a Palestinian Authority call for an end to attacks against Israeli occupation, a Gaza leader of the Palestinian resistance group said.

"Islamic Jihad will continue its resistance to the occupation, even if we reach an agreement on the document" under discussion, said top Jihad leader Mohammed al-Hindi.

Palestinian resistance groups, which engaged Monday in talks on a possible halt to attacks inside Israel, have threatened to attack the families of Israeli politicians if the deportations go ahead, said AFP.

Palestinian officials had said that all factions, including the three main resistance groups, were mulling an agreement to freeze retaliatory attacks inside Israel and instead limit their operations to the occupied territories, said AFP.

A senior Fatah official told AFP that after talks late Sunday, August 11, "all Fatah groups" had agreed to the proposed partial truce.

The military court in the West Bank settlement of Beit El made its decision in the case of Intissar Adjuri, 34, from the Askar refugee camp near Nablus, public television reported.

But the ruling also applies to her brother Kifah, 28, and to Abdel-Nasser Assidi, 34, from the village of Tel, the television added.

They are accused of having prior knowledge of the attacks and of having aided their siblings.

If their appeal to the Supreme Court fails, the trio are liable to deportation to the Gaza Strip the same day for a period of two years, their Israeli defense team said.

The court was likely to delay the deportations until the cases had been heard, the Israeli daily newspaper, Ha’aretz, reported.

The United States has voiced its disapproval of the controversial move, while Palestinians have called it a "war crime" in breach of international law.

U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan has said he is "deeply concerned" by the proposed Israeli policy and urged it to respect the fourth Geneva Convention.

Meanwhile, Israeli forces destroyed the homes of two more martyr bombers in their bid to quell such resistance acts which their military re-occupation of the West Bank has failed to stem.

"These demolitions send a message to the suicide bombers and their commanders that they will pay a price in one way or another," the army said, after Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer said the demolitions were starting to take effect.

Despite the friction generated by such controversial steps, Israeli public radio said that Foreign Minister Shimon Peres was to resume talks Wednesday, August 14,  with a Palestinian delegation headed by chief negotiated Saeb Erakat.

Meanwhile, a member of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement and an Islamic activist were killed and eight others wounded in a clash Tuesday morning at a refugee camp in southern Lebanon, Palestinian sources said.

Using rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles, gunmen staged a surprise raid on the Fatah headquarters at the main entrance of the Ain al-Helweh camp on the outskirts of the southern port city of Sidon, the sources told AFP.

The Fatah activists at the headquarters and others at the nearby camp entrance checkpoint returned fire and the shootout lasted for about 10 minutes.

One Fatah member was killed and six others were wounded and taken to hospital, the sources said.

The clash also left one Islamic activist, Lebanese Ahmad Abou Tabet, killed and two others wounded, they added.

Fatah reinforcement forces were sent to the northern entrance of the camp where clashes broke out again briefly, the sources said.

Fatah's representative in the Sidon area, Khaled Aref, told AFP the gunmen were from the Dinniyeh Group and called on them to surrender or face the likelihood of attack.

"We are engaged in negotiations with all factions at the camp, including Palestinian Islamic groups, to ask for an immediate surrender because we do not want to use force," he said.

In the past two weeks, there have been four bomb attacks against Fatah targets in Lebanon, including one that damaged the home of Khaled al-Shayeb, the group's chief for the Bekaa Valley.

About 376,000 Palestinian refugees live in Lebanon, most of them at the country's 12 squalid refugee camps that were set up after Israel's creation in 1948.

Lebanese authorities have not entered the Palestinian refugee camps since 1969, but maintain a tight security presence around them.

 

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