Hamas and Fateh's Military Wings Offer Israel Deal to Cease Suicide Attacks

Published June 4th, 2001 - 02:00 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

Following a meeting between Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and representatives of 13 factions to discuss the declared yet broken ceasefire, the military wings of mainstream Fateh and the Islamist Hamas movement declared conditional cessation of suicide attacks. 

Both movements set as a condition that Israel accept a withdrawal from the occupied territories. 

"We are going to stop our operations in our lands which are occupied since 1948 as of Monday midnight (2100 GMT)... to give the Israeli people a chance to ask their government to stop their terror against our people... and withdraw from our occupied land", the two groups said in a joint statement issued in Gaza City, the first of its kind. 

The document is signed by the Ezzeddin Al Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas, and by the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a branch of Fateh faction. 

In an interview with Abu Dhabi satellite channel, Fateh secretary in the West bank, Marwan Barghouthi, said that the representatives of the factions, known as Nationalist and Islamist Forces, listened to Arafat's assessment of the situation and showed understanding, while they, for their turn, voiced their insistence on going on with the Intifada until the Israeli occupation is ended. 

Apparently, there has been an agreement that the protests take their original form: mass peaceful protests, rather than shootings and bombs. 

"Tomorrow [Tuesday] will witness rallies in all Palestinian towns," said Barghouthi.  

The 13-movement coalition stressed in a joint statement that "the right of the Palestinian people to defend themselves against aggression, occupation and colonization and to continue the Intifada, is one of their legitimate rights." 

The group called on the Palestinians to "continue popular demonstrations to underline the continuation of the Intifada," said AFP. 

Meanwhile, the leader had told AFP that the ceasefire ordered two days ago by Arafat only applies to autonomous sectors under full Palestinian control. 

"We understand that the ceasefire ordered by Arafat only applies to "A" sectors (under full Palestinian control), from which it will be forbidden to fire, and that the Intifada will continue", Barghouthi told the agency. 

He added that the president's ceasefire order was "aimed at averting an Israeli retaliation" after the suicide attack which killed 20 Israelis and the bomber in Tel Aviv Friday night. 

He told the station that the order "observed the high national interest of the Palestinians." 

 

TWENTY FIVE PALESTINIANS INJURED IN RENEWED CLASHES WITH ISRAELI FORCES 

 

Twenty five Palestinians were injured, at least two seriously, Monday when Israeli troops shelled areas at the southern Gaza Strip on the border with Egypt, said reports.  

Following the shelling, an exchange of fire took place between armed Palestinians and Israeli occupation troops, said AFP.  

It was the first exchange of fire between the two sides since President Arafat ordered a ceasefire on Saturday.  

Two of the Palestinians were seriously injured, reported Al Jazeera satellite TV channel.  

Army tanks started firing machine-gun rounds and shells into Palestinian land, a Palestinian security official said.  

Armed Palestinians then fired back, a Palestinian official told AFP, adding that they were not members of the Palestinian Authority's security forces.  

After a heavy exchange of fire, Palestinian security forces intervened and succeeded in stopping the gunmen firing, the official said, adding that Israeli forces continued shooting.  

Palestinian homes had been damaged by splinters from tank shells, while doctors said the 15 Palestinians, including at least four boys, had been wounded by bullets and shrapnel.  

Meanwhile, five Israeli soldiers were injured when they were trying to enter a residential area in Rafah, Gaza Strip, said Al Jazeera satellite channel.  

AFP said three Israeli soldiers were injured.  

Israeli radio stations also reported that Palestinians fired anti-tank grenades and light weapons at Israeli troops in the town, but there were no injuries or damage.  

But Israeli military officials said that only a soldier and an officer were light injured.  

Mortar shells also hit Israeli targets in the Gaza Strip, leaving no one injured, with bombs falling by the Sufa border crossing with Israel near the site of the gunbattle, the Israeli army reported, cited by AFP.  

 

 

PALESTINIANS SAY FIRING ON ISRAELI TARGETS DOWN 99 PERCENT SINCE CEASEFIRE  

 

Palestinian and Israeli officials differed on whether the ceasefire promised by the Palestinian leadership was aptly implemented.  

A senior Palestinian official said Monday that firing on Israeli targets had gone down 99 percent since Arafat ordered a ceasefire on Saturday, reported AFP.  

"Firing on Israeli targets in the West Bank and Gaza Strip has gone down 99 percent in the past two days compared with previous days," the official told AFP in Gaza City, asking not to be named.  

But Israeli officials had earlier said the evidence that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat was committed to his ceasefire call was "not promising."  

"We are giving one more chance for peace at present by seeing whether Mr. Arafat will follow through his ceasefire commitment," Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's advisor, Dore Gold, told AFP.  

"Right now the evidence is not very promising."  

Gold said there had been a drop in anti-Israeli attacks since then, but highlighted a mortar attack in the Gaza Strip overnight and a roadside bombing in the West Bank earlier Monday.  

A bomb exploded at the Jewish settlement of Barkan in the northern West Bank, causing no injuries, reported Israel Radio, cited by Haaretz newspaper.  

The pipe bomb went off in front of an Israeli car, leaving the driver in a state of shock, a military spokesman told the radio.  

The sector was immediately cordoned off by troops.  

 

PAPAL ENVOY BRANDS ISRAELI SETTLEMENTS A 'PROVOCATION'  

 

AFP also reported that a Papal envoy to the Middle East on Monday called Israeli settlements in the West Bank a "provocation" that had triggered a disproportionate and unjustifiable, albeit understandable Palestinian reaction.  

In an interview with Radio Vatican, Cardinal Pio Laghi said that Pope John Paul II's appeal for a ceasefire was being heard by Israelis and Palestinians, but with huge difficulties.  

"Overall, the pope's message has been heard with much respect" by both sides, he said.  

Laghi earlier said in an interview with AFP that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was making "extraordinary efforts" to bring violence in the Middle East under control in spite of serious tensions.  

Laghi traveled to Jerusalem on Thursday to hand over personal messages for Sharon and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, pleading for a ceasefire in the region.  

Laghi said that the "messages were accepted with much interest and respect for the pope.”  

For Sharon "peace is equivalent to security; naturally security is based on a number of conditions," he said in his interview with Radio Vatican.  

"For example, these settlements in the territories which should be returned to the Palestinian Authority are in a sense a provocation, to say the least.  

"It triggers an absolutely disproportionate and unjustifiable reaction by the other side, which is however a bit understandable."  

Laghi met with Arafat after the funeral of senior Palestinian official Faisal al-Husseini on Friday.  

"I was surprised that Arafat would dedicate so much time to us, to our mission after the death of his friend and aide," he added.  

John Paul II is to be given a full report of Laghi's meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. The report is already in the hands of the Vatican's number two, Cardinal Angelo Sodano.  

The Middle East crisis was also discussed between the Palestinian Catholic Patriarch of Jerusalem, Michel Sabbah, and the pontiff in the Vatican on Monday but nothing emerged from the meeting.  

The patriarch's visit to the pope had been scheduled for some time but gained new interest because of the current crisis, said Laghi.  

"Sabbah can also explain the Palestinian position to the pope," he added.  

In his message to Sharon the pope reportedly appealed for a halt to the violence that has raged for eight months.  

Sharon's office said that the premier requested that the papal delegation "use its influence and deliver an unequivocal message to Arafat to order an immediate cessation of all acts of terror, murder and incitement."  

The pope has made repeated appeals for peace between Israel and the Palestinians since violence erupted in September last year.  

During Sunday mass in Saint Peter's square he prayed for the "young victims of absurd violence" after Friday's suicide bombing - Albawaba.com

© 2001 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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