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Palestinians
search through the rubble of a building dynamited by the Israeli
army in Askar refugee camp in Nablus
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NABLUS,
West Bank, Aug 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Israeli
occupation forces stormed this West Bank town Friday, August 8, killing
four Palestinians and wounding five others, triggering criticism from
the Palestinian Authority and retaliation threats from the resistance
group Hamas.
According
to Palestinian sources, Israeli occupation forces besieged a four-storey
house near a chewing gum factory overlooking Askar camp.
"Believing
Hamas cadres were inside, Israeli soldiers broke into the building,
backed by helicopter gunships which fired missiles on the third floor
causing its collapse and killing two Hamas activists," they added.
The
Israeli Yediot Aharonot reported, for its part, that Israeli commandos
pushed into Nablus late Thursday to hunt for "wanted" Hamas
members.
After
laying siege to a residential building and asking those holing inside to
get out, Israeli forces came under fire from the third floor window,
triggering a shootout, the paper argued.
It
said that with the early hours of Friday, the Israeli army ordered
residents of the building's lower floors to evacuate, and then blasted
the whole building to make sure that no one would survive.
The
two Hamas activists killed in the Israeli incursion were identified as
Khamis Abu Salem, 22, while the second was identified as Fayez Assader,
26.
An
Israeli army spokesman was quoted by Agence France-Presse (AFP) as
claiming Abu Salem was not the target of the raid and was gunned down
after opening fire on Israeli troops.
A
20-year-old Palestinian died from bullet wounds after throwing stones at
Israeli troops in a street protest over the incursion while another, 41,
died after inhaling tear gas sprayed by Israeli soldiers.
Five
other Palestinians were moderately injured in the same incident, sources
in the local hospital said.
The
Israeli army had earlier announced that Staff Sergeant Roi Oren, a
20-year-old marine commando, had died in an exchange of fire.
The
deaths brought to 3,393 the number of people killed since the outbreak
of Al-Aqsa Intifada in September 2000, including 2,557 Palestinians and
775 Israelis, according to an AFP count.
Not
To 'Stay silent'
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Smoke
rises from a building during the Israeli army incursion that left
four people killed
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Responding
to the Israeli killing of its two members, Hamas vowed it would
"not stay silent".
"This
is flagrant violation of the truce by the Zionist enemy," Ismail
Abu Shanab, a senior Hamas political leader in Gaza, told AFP.
"Hamas
will discuss this aggression but we cannot be silent about this
violation and aggression."
Hamas
was one of a several Palestinian resistance groups which announced
it was suspending
attacks against Israel for three months to give room for the
implementation of the roadmap peace plan.
But
it attached a raft of conditions to the truce, including "an
immediate halt to all types of Zionist aggressions".
Violence
has drastically diminished in the past few weeks but Israel says the
truce is unilateral and it is not bound by its terms.
"This
violation shows the Zionists have no respect for the hudna," Shanab
added, using the Arabic for truce.
However,
senior Hamas leaders said the group was still committed to its decision
to halt anti-Israeli attacks.
Its
armed wing, the Ezzedine Al Qassam Brigades, explicitly called on
members to avenge Friday's killings.
A
statement issued by the Brigades called "on all cells to answer
this crime and teach the enemy the right lesson.
"The
crimes of the Zionist enemy, perpetrated against our people, and its
daily violations will not go without the enemy paying a commensurate
price."
Asked
whether the statement meant the truce was over, Hamas political leader
Abdelaziz al-Rantissi said: "Hamas is still committed to the truce
it declared but, as it said in recent statements, Zionist violations
will not go without being answered."
More
Clashes
In
another Israeli aggression, three members of Fatah military wing were
injured in an ambush by Israeli forces in the West Bank city of Jenin.
Israeli
forces blocked and opened fire on ambulance vehicles while trying to
evacuate the wounded, al-Jazeera reported, quoting Palestinian sources
as saying one of the wounded was still held by the occupation forces.
The
Israeli army broke into a neighborhood in the city under allegations of
hunting "wanted" Palestinians, but were met by stiff
resistance, the Qatar-based channel reported.
The
Fatah military wing Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades vowed "harsh"
response to the ambush of its members.
Fatah
had declared a six-month suspension of attacks against Israeli targets
on June 29.
"Local
inhabitants were used by the sweeping forces as human shields to break
into and destroy the house and others nearby," the Authority
charged in a statement.
Lead
To 'Failure'
Palestinian
government officials also said the ceasefire and any possible extension
may have been compromised by the bloody Nablus incursion.
"Are
these brutal aggressions a practical translation of the roadmap as
understood by the Israeli government,?" The Palestinian Authority
wondered in a statement.
It
stressed that Israel should be held accountable for the repercussions of
its aggressions and disrespect of the ceasefire.
The
PA statement, carried by the Palestinian news agency, accused the
Israeli occupation forces of using Palestinian civilians as human
shields in storming the building in Askar camp.
Palestinian
Culture Minister Ziad Abu Amer recalled "we had a lot of meetings
last week and we reached a very positive positions from factions.
"But
I see the Israeli army are trying to prevent us from reaching any
positive agreement with the factions," added the man who was a key
figure in negotiating the ceasefire with the resistance groups.
Amr
predicted the truce could collapse as a result of Friday's
assassinations.
"The
continuance of this action from the Israeli army will lead for sure to a
failure of the truce," stressed the Palestinian minister.
Also,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat's aide Nabil Abu Rudeina lambasted
the Israeli incursion as a brazen "violation of the truce."
Meanwhile,
U.S. President George W. Bush signed Thursday, August 7, a six-month
executive order authorizing the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
to maintain its offices in the U.S., the White House said.
The
order extends similar ones signed by Bush to conform with a
congressional vote on U.S.-PLO relations.
The
State Department 2003 budget bill passed by Congress alludes to the
PLO's 1993 commitment to recognize Israel's right to exist, accept U.N.
Security Council resolutions 242 and 338 (which Israel refuses to
implement), peacefully resolve its differences with Israel and renounce
terrorism and all other acts of violence.
'Indicted'
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"I
see the Israeli army are trying to prevent us from reaching any
positive agreement with the factions," said Amr
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In
the meanwhile, two Israeli settlers were formally indicted Friday for
possessing explosives which had been stolen from the army to carry out
anti-Arab attacks, according to judicial and security sources.
Yitzhak
Pass from the Jewish quarter of Al-Khalil (Hebron) and his
brother-in-law Mattatyahu Shvu were arrested last month.
They
have been accused of transporting four kilograms of explosives which had
been stolen from an army base in occupied Jerusalem with a view to
carrying out anti-Arab attacks, judicial sources said.
Eight
blocks of explosives were discovered in Pass's car when it was stopped
on July 17, a statement from the Shin Beth security service added.
The
international community deems Jewish settlements illegal since they are
built on Palestinian land captured by Israeli army.