 |
|
Palestinians try to remind the world of their catastrophe
|
NABLUS,
West Bank, Oct 5 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A second
Palestinian teenage stone-thrower was shot and killed within 24 hours
Saturday, October 5, in the West Bank, while the Palestinian resistance
group Hamas said its activists ambushed an Israeli army patrol in the
northern Gaza Strip Saturday morning, setting off two bombs as the
soldiers went by.
Amar Rajab, 15, was among a group of youths defying a curfew in Ein Beth
Ilma refugee camp, near Nablus in the northern West Bank, and throwing
stones at the occupation army jeeps, Palestinian witnesses and hospital
sources said, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The Israeli soldiers in the vehicles answered with live bullets.
The hospital sources added that five other Palestinians were wounded in
Nablus and the surrounding area in other incidents with Israeli troops.
On Friday, a teenager was killed in similar circumstances in the
northern border village of Barta'a.
A 12-year-old also suffered critical head injuries Friday after being
hit by Israeli fire in another refugee camp near Nablus, with the army
claiming it had opened fired after its troops came under fire by gunmen.
There was no immediate army reaction to the latest killing in the
two-year Palestinian Intifada.
Meanwhile, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas,
claimed the attack in Gaza Strip against the Israeli occupation forces
there, and said the Israelis suffered a number of casualties. Hamas
said, in a statement, that the attack came as an initial response to
Israel’s attempt on the life of Hamas leader Abu Dief on September 26.
The Palestinian leader escaped death.
For its part, the Israeli army confirmed that there had been one
explosion, but denied that there had been any casualties.
 |
|
Killings by Israeli occupation forces are a daily routine
|
Trying
to justify the army’s continuous aggressions on the Palestinian
civilians, in violation of international law protecting peoples under
occupation, Israel's army chief of staff said the "terror
infrastructure" in the West Bank had been hit hard, but that
further work was needed in the Gaza Strip.
Israel,
riding the wave of the so-called U.S.-led war on terror following the
September 11 attacks, has been doing its best to link the legal right of
the Palestinian people to resist occupation with “terrorism”,
analysts believe.
Israeli troops re-occupied much of the West Bank in June, imposing
curfews there and carrying out raids and abductions that dealt a serious
blow to Palestinian resistance groups there.
"The terror infrastructure in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) has
been hit hard," General Moshe Yaalon was quoted in the Ha’aretz
daily as saying in a speech to a Tel Aviv business group Friday.
"(But) in the Gaza Strip there is still a long way to go."
Without mentioning Yasser Arafat by name, Yaalon also said the decision
to end Palestinian "terror" could only be made by the head of
the Palestinian Authority, but "with the current one, this will
probably not happen."
He claimed the current Palestinian leadership still does not recognize
Israel's existence as a Jewish state, and wants to use terror and
demographics to impose a Palestinian state stretching from the
Mediterranean Sea to Jordan.
In London, the Guardian newspaper reported Saturday that Prime Minister
Tony Blair's drive for Middle East peace talks has been rebuffed by U.S.
President George W. Bush, only days after he flagged the plan, amid
gathering clouds of war over Iraq.
At his Labor Party conference, the Prime Minister pushed Tuesday,
October 1, for a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian talks, backed by an
international conference before the end of the year.
According to The Guardian, Bush blocked the initiative and made it clear
to Blair that he does not want such talks to be held in the near future.
Israeli public radio also said Prime Minister Ariel Sharon will visit
Washington later this month, after being invited by Bush, to discuss the
stale-mated position in the Middle East conflict amid the U.S. plans to
invade Iraq.
Arafat charged Israel is using the U.S.-led campaign against Iraq as a
smokescreen to launch major attacks on the Palestinian people.
"There is no doubt that the Israelis are using the attack against
Iraq and the fact that the world has become preoccupied and focused on
what is happening there as an opportunity to launch major operations
against our people," in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East
Jerusalem, Arafat told a Spanish newspaper.
|
|
Palestine:
Palestinian Teen Killed, Hamas Attack Israeli Forces in Gaza
Israeli Police Storm Al-Aqsa, Gaza Protests Jerusalem Bill
Israeli Occupation Army Practiced Arafat Exile Operation
Hundreds of Palestinians Call For Barghuti's Freedom
Occupation Will Turn Israel into Apartheid State of Terror: Israeli Lawyer
Israel Keeps Thousands of Palestinians From School: UNICEF
U.S., Europe Criticize India Over Gujarat
Hamas Spiritual Leader Addresses Egyptian Demonstrators
Iraq:
Thousands in Italy, Switzerland, Australia Protest U.S.
Attack On Iraq
U.S. Spy Facility in Australia Sealed As Anti-War Protesters Gather
Arabs Can Not Prevent War Or Impose Peace: Bahraini King
Despite Opposition, Congress To Give Bush
Go-Ahead For Attacking Iraq
Turkey Warns Iraqi Kurdish Parliament against Separatist Moves
Arms
Experts Spied on Iraq: Swede Inspector
No
Need For New Resolution on Iraq: Russia
Congress Close to Authorizing Force Against
Iraq
U.S. Will
Use U.N. Inspections to Invade Iraq: Guardian
Jordan Renews Opposition to Serving As Launchpad for Attacking Iraq
House Leaders Give Bush Green Light to Attack Iraq
Iraq Crisis Should Not Overshadow Mideast Conflict: France
U.S. War on Iraq to Start December 7: Russian Sources
“NO to U.S. War on Iraq,” Shout South
Korean Students
Rwanda Completes Pull Out of Troops From DR
Congo
Elections Revive Bitter Memories For Bosnian
Refugees
EU Must Take Up Balkan Slack As U.S. Has
“Other Priorities”: Greece
India-Pakistan Tensions High After Missile Tests
Mahathir Denounces Pastor Falwell for Anti-Prophet Mohammad Remarks
Violence, Coercion Mar Third Round of Jammu& Kashmir Polls
Widespread Condemnation of Nepalese King's Sacking of Premier
U.S. Spy Facility in Australia Sealed As Anti-War Protesters Gather
"American-Taliban" Walker Lindh Jailed for 20 Years
Negotiations Continue on Ivory Coast Ceasefire Accord
Thailand, Malaysia to Boost Tourism, Shrug off Global Slump
India, U.S. Hold Joint Air Exercises in Alaska
India Border Flares up, Killings, Kidnappings, Mysterious Flight
Pakistan
Carries out Successful Ballistic Missile
Test
Sudan, Rebels Agree to Truce, Resume Talks: Mediators
|
|
|
|
|
|