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Jamal
Zabara, one of five Palestinians killed by Israeli forces Monday
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GAZA
CITY, December 31 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A Palestinian man
was shot dead early Tuesday, December 31, by Israeli occupation forces
overnight in the Gaza Strip, bringing the death toll from a day of heavy
clampdown on the Palestinians to five, as the year ended on a much less
hopeful note than it began.
The
latest victim, Hassan Abu-Said, aged 40, was killed by Israeli gunfire
from a Jewish settlement near Khan Yunis, Palestinian security sources
said, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Earlier
Monday, December 30, Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian resistance
activist, disguised as an Israeli soldier, on the Gaza-Israel border,
while in the West Bank they killed three civilians, including one
apparently beaten to death in Al-Khalil (Hebron), said AFP.
Two
other people were injured, one critically, in the clashes in the city
center, which like the rest of the West Bank was reoccupied by Israel
six months ago.
In
the southern West Bank, Israeli forces also destroyed the homes of two
Palestinian college students who gunned down four Israelis at the nearby
colonial settlement of Otniel Friday, December 27.
The
latest deaths bring the toll since the start of the second Palestinian
Intifada in September 2000 to more than 2,800 people, most of them
Palestinians.
The
year 2002, ending in all too familiar bloodshed, had begun amid hopes of
a breakthrough in the Middle East peace process.
On
January 1, U.S. officials said that Washington's special envoy Anothony
Zinni was returning to the region, while the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades,
an offshoot of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement,
said it was signing up to his truce call.
There
had been a clear decrease in violence in the Palestinian territories
since an appeal for calm from Arafat.
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In
the West Bank, Israeli forces destroyed the homes of two
Palestinian college students
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That
was in the days when people were still talking about the Tenet and
Mitchell plans, internationally approved schemes to defuse the violence
and open the door to political negotiations.
However,
after a year of deadly Israeli army incursions in formerly
Palestinian-ruled areas and Palestinian retaliatory bombings in Israeli
areas, the crisis shows no signs of abating.
The
spiritual leader of the resistance Islamic movement Hamas, Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin, said Monday, December 30, that halting resistance bomb attacks
would only serve the interests of right-wing Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon in next month's general elections.
"The
end of martyr operations would serve the interests of the Zionist
right-wing and allow the terrorist Sharon to tell voters... he had been
able to make the operations stop and to guarantee their security,"
Yassin told a website close to Hamas.
Yassin
insisted retaliatory martyr attacks "will carry on" and Israel
"will have no security as long as the Palestinian people are
subjected to occupation."
There
are still some people opposed to the fighting, not always from the most
obvious quarters.
Meanwhile,
in occupied Jerusalem, the Israeli Supreme Court rejected Monday an
appeal by eight Israeli army reserve officers refusing to serve in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip because the 35-year occupation of the
Palestinian territories is illegal.
The
court's three judges argued that "selective conscientious objection
cannot be recognized because it could weaken the ties that bind us as a
nation."
The
officers, most of whom have served jail terms for their beliefs, hoped
to make a landmark case out of their appeal, in effect putting the
occupation on trial.
On
the political front, meanwhile, Sharon trained his sights on members of
his own party caught up in a vote-rigging scandal, reportedly
threatening to sack one deputy minister.
Sharon
moved to limit political fall-out from a corruption scandal dogging his
dominant Likud party, which has already affected his huge lead in
opinion polls ahead of January 28 elections.
Press
reports said Monday Sharon aims to sack Deputy Infrastructure Minister
Naomi Blumenthal after she refused to answer police questions about
accusations of having paid hotel bills of Likud central committee
members in return for their support in internal elections.
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Israeli
army reserve soldier Lt. David Zonshein (R) and his lawyer read
the Court’s rejection of the appeal not to serve in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip
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Likud
members who failed to be selected as candidates for parliament in the
party's polls this month have accused central committee members of
taking bribes in return for their votes to secure others a place on the
electoral list.
Opinion
polls suggest that though the party is still far ahead of Labor Party,
it can now count on taking only some 35 seats in the 120-seat
parliament, against 40 at the start of the campaign.
Meanwhile,
Israel's Central Elections Committee also barred a leading Arab-Israeli
MP and former advisor to President Arafat from running in the elections.
Ahmed
Tibi was stripped of his right to stand in the polls because he
allegedly "supported terrorist organizations which commit
anti-Israeli attacks," committee sources said.
Tibi,
for his part, called the ruling a "black day" for Israeli
democracy and intends to appeal the decision to the High Court, the
Israeli daily Ha’aretz, reported.
The
Tibi ruling was the second decision made by the committee against the
opinion of CEC chairman Justice Mishael Cheshin, who called on committee
members not to disqualify Tibi's candidacy, despite the fact, Cheshin
said, that "he often treads a very dangerous tightrope".
Cheshin
called the disqualification "a bad and incorrect decision."
Labor
MK Shimon Peres also slammed the ruling, telling Army Radio Tuesday the
committee's decision was "the wrong one."
The
panel's decision to disqualify Tibi also contradicted the recommendation
made by Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein. The High Court will have to
decide on the matter by January 9.
"This
is a black day for democracy, and a slap in the face of the Arab
minority in the state of Israel, and of all those who seek to build a
different sort of relationship between the Jewish majority and the Arab
minority," Tibi said in remarks broadcast Tuesday.