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"They
are seeking a pretext to reassure their people and cover up their
failure," Yassin
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OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, January 16 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Israel
considers resuming the wave of assassinations against Palestinian
resistance fighters, sending a clear threatening message to Hamas
spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.
"Sheik
Yassin is marked for death, and he should hide himself deep
underground where he won't know the difference between day and
night,"
Israeli deputy defense
minister Zeev Boin told Army Radio Thursday, January 15, adding Yassin
"deserves to die".
"And
we will find him in the tunnels, and we will eliminate him," Boim
said after senior Israeli security officials met to consider targeting
senior Hamas officials, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Israel
claims that the bombing attack at the main crossing point between the
Gaza Strip and Israel that killed
four Israelis and injured several others, came on the orders
of Sheikh Yassin himself.
However,
Hamas founder and leader denied any direct involvement in the attack,
saying that “death threats do not frighten us, because we are
in search of martyrdom".
The
Israelis "know that Sheikh Yassin has nothing to do with military
action, but they are seeking a pretext to reassure their people and
cover up their failure," he was quoted by AFP as saying.
Hamas
and Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an offshoot of Fatah, claimed
responsibility for the attack, which
the two groups said the operation was in response to the
assassination of a military leader of the Islamic Jihad,
December 25.
And
Sheikh Yassin said that "resistance will escalate" against
Israel until "it ends occupation of our land and homeland".
He
already dodged one Israeli attempt to kill him in September. A
warplane dropped a 250-kilogram bomb on a building where he and the
rest of the top Hamas leadership were meeting in a single room, but
Yassin escaped with just a small wound to his hand.
Hamas
and Islamic Jihad declared
in August 2003 an end to a temporary truce after Israeli forces
assassinated Hamas senior political official Ismail Rantissi as part
of a large wave targeting other resistance leaders.
Detentions
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Israel
has sealed off the Gaza Strip
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In
the meantime, Israel has sealed off the Gaza Strip, and one Israeli
official said a "general closure" had been imposed, meaning
no Palestinian laborers from Gaza would be permitted into Israel.
Palestinians
dismissed the measure as a collective punishment.
Meanwhile,
a number of shooting incidents took place in at the settlement of
Kadim near Jenin, at Tul Karm, in the Katif Bloc, and in Rafah, and
Israelis reported no injuries, Ha’aretz reported.
Settlements
are deemed illegal by the international community, as their erection
forced many Palestinians to live in refugee camps in or outside the
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Israel
also detained 14 Palestinians in the Jenin area, Tulkarem, and
Ramallah, and destroyed the homes of two resistance fighters in Tul
Karm refugee camp.
One
house belonged to a Hamas activist who was slain by the Israeli
soldiers last year, and the other to a member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades who was detained by Israeli troops a few days ago,
Palestinian security sources told AFP.
Israeli
armored vehicles also thrust into the Jenin refugee camp, sparking an
exchange of fire between occupation troops and resistance fighters,
the same sources said.
No
injuries were reported, but the troops were carrying out searches in
the camp, where a curfew was imposed.
According
to military sources, nine Palestinians were also detained in the West
Bank Thursday.
Two
of them were brothers who have been actively campaigning against the
separation wall and organized protests in the village of Budrus, near
Ramallah, Palestinian sources said.
Separation
Wall Under More Fire
On
the political front, international efforts continued to defuse the
long-standing conflict.
Irish
Foreign Minister Brian Cowen, whose country has just assumed the
rotating presidency of the European Union, held talks with Israeli
Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom in Tel Aviv and was due to meet Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon later.
His
visit comes as Israel is stepping up preparations for its defense at
an upcoming hearing in the International Court of Justice – February
23 - over the legality of its controversial separation wall.
This
also comes as the Israeli high court decided Thursday to discuss the
legality of the controversial barrier within a month, according to the
BBC news online.
The
wall intrudes on swathes of Palestinian land, and was criticized by
many international officials, including U.S. President George W. Bush
who called it a "problem".
When
he last visited the region in June last year, Cowen had opted to hold
talks with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. The Israeli leadership
refuses to meet foreign diplomats who hold talks with Arafat, whom
Sharon and the United States have tried to sideline.