Israeli Troops Wound Two Palestinians
Israeli troops fired at Palestinians trying to bypass a checkpoint Monday, critically wounding one man and injuring a 14-year-old boy, a day after a similar incident in the same location killed one Palestinian, witnesses and hospital officials said.
The Israeli military said troops fired warning shots and then shot toward the group, after the pedestrians ignored orders to halt.
Meanwhile, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat prepared to swear in a small eight-member Cabinet on Tuesday, with Ahmed Qureia as prime minister, after declaring a state of emergency in the Palestinian areas. Arafat’s decree came a day after an Islamic Jihad suicide bomber killed 19 Israelis in a restaurant in the port city of Haifa.
The Palestinians wounded in the Gaza Strip had been trying to cross a road closed by the military a daily earlier, as part of new restrictions imposed in response to the Haifa bombing. The road links the southern Gaza towns of Rafah and Khan Younis, and was blocked by a checkpoint.
A 42-year-old man was in critical condition with a head wound, and 14-year-old boy was shot in the leg, hospital officials said. On Sunday, a 26-year-old man was killed and three others were wounded while trying to bypass the same checkpoint.
Also Monday, Israeli tanks and bulldozers entered the Rafah refugee camp in southern Gaza and demolished four Palestinian homes, Palestinian security officials and local residents said.
Israeli army officials said they had no report of house demolitions in the area.
The Islamic militant group Hamas, meanwhile, said it fired 16 mortar shells at Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip overnight, in retaliation for an Israeli air strike on a suspected Islamic Jihad training camp in Syria. Israel had launched the strike in reprisal for the Haifa bombing.
The Israel army said Monday that it was checking the claim of the mortar fire.
Hamas also said it would also carry out more attacks in Israel. “Any aggression against an Arab or Islamic country is an aggression against the Palestinian people and, God willing, our response to this aggression will be decisive,” read a statement on a Hamas web site. “We call on our fighters … to respond quickly, and in the heart of the Zionist entity, to this serious escalation.”
With tensions high after the strike on Syria, gunfire broke out at the Israeli-Lebanese border Monday. Lebanese security officials said Israeli soldiers fired automatic rifles across the border, apparently at two Lebanese cars and a U.N. water tanker, though the reason was unknown. Israel denied its soldiers fired across the border.
The Palestinian emergency government to be sworn in Tuesday will serve for a limited term of a month, with a possible one-month extension if two-thirds of legislators back the idea. Qureia could also present a full-sized Cabinet to parliament within a month.
Qureia, tapped by Arafat for the job last month, had initially planned to present a larger government to parliament for approval later in the week.
However, following the Haifa bombing, Arafat was clearly concerned about possible Israeli action against him. Israel threatened last month to “remove” Arafat, without setting a time, and there were new demands for his expulsion after Saturday’s attack.
In installing an emergency Cabinet, Arafat made it more difficult for Israel to move against him. The United States appears willing to give Qureia a chance, and any Israeli action against Arafat could force Qureia’s immediate resignation and cause chaos in Palestinian areas.
Qureia said three portfolios were assigned: Nabil Shaath as foreign minister, Salam Fayad as finance minister and Nasser Yousef as interior minister.
Qureia listed the other five members of the Cabinet as Saeb Erekat, the current chief negotiator; Nabil Abu Hummus, the current education minister; Jamal Shobaki, the current minister of local affairs; and two legislators from Arafat’s Fatah movement, Abdel Rahman Hamad and Jawad Tibi.
