Quantcast
  • E-mail
  • Print
  • Comment
  • Font Size
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Discuss article

Militants renew truce after Israel fires on Gaza

Posted on: Tuesday, 27 September 2005, 08:18 CDT

By Nidal al-Mughrabi

GAZA (Reuters) - Israel fired missiles into Gaza and detained dozens of Palestinian militants in the West Bank on Tuesday, pursuing an offensive ordered by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon after cross-border rocket salvoes by gunmen.

Later on Tuesday, Islamic Jihad said it and other militant groups were abiding once again by an informal ceasefire.

"We renewed our commitment to calm while reserving the right to respond if Israel continued its attacks. The ball now is in Israel's court," senior Islamic Jihad leader Khaled al-Batsh told Reuters after a meeting of militant factions in Gaza City.

They fell into line with the largest faction Hamas, which had said on Sunday it was calling off attacks, and rocket fire from Gaza over the border into Israel has since abated.

Tuesday's air strikes destroyed two bridges and two buildings said by Israel to have been used by militants, hours after Sharon overcame a leadership challenge in his right-wing party driven by anger at his removal of settlers from Gaza.

Israeli troops rounded up 82 suspected militants in the West Bank, bringing to 300 the number arrested since Sharon ordered a crackdown on armed factions that resumed rocket fire last week for the first time since Israel's pullout from Gaza.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurie welcomed the militants' decision to shelve attacks. His government wants a peaceful Gaza to create a basis for a Palestinian state.

Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said before Islamic Jihad's announcement that Israel would press ahead with its offensive as long as rocket attacks continued and that he did not rule out a ground incursion back into Gaza.

The worst surge in violence since Israel completed the pullout on September 12 tested the brittle ceasefire and a vow by Sharon that his move would help the Jewish state's security.

The executive of Sharon's Likud party on Monday narrowly voted down a motion by his rival Benjamin Netanyahu to bring forward a primary election that might have unseated the premier.

SHARON ACTS TOUGH

The result averted early elections and reduced the chances of Sharon leaving the party he co-founded in the 1970s to create a centrist bloc drawing on broad support for the Gaza pullout.

Polls suggested Netanyahu would win. However, Sharon's firm response to resurgent Palestinian rocket fire with a series of air strikes that killed four militants, including an Islamist Jihad commander, may have shaded the vote in Sharon's favor.

His authorization of further military action reflected his need, ahead of what is sure to be a close Likud primary showdown with Netanyahu set for April, to counter any impression among voters that quitting Gaza has made Israel less safe.

General elections must be held by November 2006.

Most Israelis backed Sharon's uprooting of all 21 Jewish settlements in Gaza after 38 years of occupation. They agreed it made sense to extract 8,500 settlers who tied down Israeli army divisions guarding them from 1.4 million Palestinians.

Sharon billed the move as "disengagement" from conflict with the Palestinians in a place of no strategic or economic value.

Netanyahu argued that the withdrawal would turn Gaza into a militant base and said the weekend rocket attacks showed that the first dismantling of settlements on land where Palestinians seek statehood would spur, not deter, violence.

Sharon has tried to placate Likud hardliners by vowing that Israel will never cede large settlement blocs in the West Bank, where 245,000 Jews live isolated from 2.4 million Palestinians.

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said the Likud vote was an internal Israeli matter and added: "We invite Mr Sharon to resume final-status talks so we can reach the end game."

Palestinians are keen to launch negotiations based on a U.S.-devised "road map" peace plan for a Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank. Israel rejects such talks before Palestinians disarm militants opposed to a negotiated solution.

The latest hostilities erupted when a blast on Friday killed 17 people at a Hamas parade in Gaza. Hamas blamed Israel and militants fired at least 40 rockets into the Jewish state.

Israel denied responsibility and the Palestinian Authority blamed the blast on Hamas members mishandling explosives.

(Writing by Mark Heinrich in Jerusalem, additional reporting by Corinne Heller in Jerusalem and Wafa Amr in Ramallah)


Source: REUTERS

More News in this Category


Related Articles



Rating: 2.5 / 5 (8 votes)
Rate this article:
1/52/53/54/55/5

User Comments (0)

Comment on this article

Your Name
Text from the image
Comment
max 1200 chars
* All fields are required