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Israeli soldiers carry out more detention in Palestinian areas
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GAZA,
August 28 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – As the United
States pointedly ignored Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's call for
resistance groups to reinstate a shattered truce on Wednesday, August
27, the Israeli army stepped up its raids on Palestinian-ruled areas.
Arafat
appeal was also rejected by Islamic resistance movement Hamas.
The
White House dismissed Arafat’s call and said peace efforts should
focus on dismantling resistance networks.
"Actions
to dismantle ‘terrorist’ organizations and to dismantle
‘terrorist’ networks are what is needed and what's most
important," White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan said.
She
criticized the Palestinian leader as an obstacle to peace.
"Arafat
has once again shown himself to be part of the problem, and the
security forces need to be consolidated under Prime Minister
Abbas," she said in press statements carried by Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"He
is not part of the solution," the White House spokeswoman told
reporters in Crawford, Texas where Bush is now on vacation at his
ranch.
"The
way forward in Israel, in the Middle East is by dismantling terrorist
networks, by dismantling terrorist organizations, and one of the first
steps in the roadmap is the consolidation of security forces under
prime minister Abbas," Buchan said.
"That
must happen," she added.
At
the State Department, deputy spokesman Philip Reeker offered a similar
appraisal, refusing to even mention Arafat's appeal in a series of
terse sentences.
"Terrorism
has to stop now," he told reporters. "There has to be an end
to violence. It has to be unconditional. They've got to end the
violence."
Hamas
Rejects
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"There has to be an end to violence. It has to be unconditional. They've got to end the violence," Reeker
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For
it part, Hamas rejected Thursday Arafat appeal to renew the
truce which was called off after the killing of one of its co-founders
last week.
"Hamas
rejects the appeal (by Arafat) to resume the truce as the Zionist
occupation has the torpedoed the truce with their assassinations of
women, children and Palestinian political leaders," Hamas
political leader Abdelaziz Rantissi told AFP.
"We
cannot speak about a truce while aggression against the Palestinian
people continues."
Earlier
Wednesday, Arafat called
on Palestinian factions to renew their commitment to the ceasefire
they had ended after Israeli assassination
of Hamas senior political leader Ismail Abu Shanab.
The
move has added a new twist to the power struggle between the
U.S.-shunned Arafat and the U.S.-backed Abbas who along with his
security chief Mohammed Dahlan is trying to wrest authority over all
Palestinian forces from Arafat.
Abbas
currently controls three of the many Palestinian security branches -
the civil police, civil defense and preventive security force.
The
35,000-40,000 strong national security force and other branches such
as intelligence, the navy and border police, are still under Arafat's
command.
But
the cabinet decided Wednesday to include the security forces in its
general budget, as a battle for control over them intensified with
Arafat.
An
allocation was made under the heading "National Security
Forces" to cover personnel whose salaries were previously paid
directly from Arafat's office, officials said.
Abbas
and Dahlan have been seeking to wrest control of the myriad
Palestinian security forces from Arafat with U.S. and Israeli
blessing.
Abbas
said in a statement on Wednesday that Israel is to the one to blame
for any possible repercussions for its decision to step up its recent
military escalations.
"This
brutal Israeli government policy will only take us back to the vicious
cycle of violence," Abbas said in a statement Wednesday.
“Israel
must understand there is no military solution to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict," he said.
After
the Cabinet meeting, Information minister Nabil Amr told reporters
that the cabinet held "Israel fully responsible for this
deterioration, and all the grave implications it has on regional
stability."
Amr
also said that Abbas would seek a vote of confidence from the
Palestinian parliament on his first 100 days in office in the coming
week.
More
Raids
In
the meanwhile, the Israeli army said Wednesday it had detained 32
“wanted” activists in a series of overnight raids in the West
Bank, including a string of Hamas activists.
They
also detonated an alleged Islamic Jihad bomb-making factory uncovered
during a raid in the town of Nablus.
Early
Thursday, Israeli troops dynamited the West Bank home of an Islamic
Jihad activist, a Palestinian security source said.
The
army destroyed the home of Hani Zakaria in Qabatyah, in the northern
West Bank, the source said.
The
same source said that the Israeli army had pulled out of the old
quarter of the West Bank town of Nablus only to move into the
neighboring Ballata refugee center where it imposed a curfew and
launched search raids.
Meanwhile,
ten mortars were fired, without causing injury, towards Jewish
settlements in the Gaza Strip overnight Wednesday, a military source
said.
A
Palestinian teenager on Wednesday died of his injuries, becoming the
second civilian victim of the abortive Israeli air raid in the Gaza
Strip the previous day, medics here said.
Mohammad
Balusha, 17, was near the vehicle hit by rocket fire from an Israeli
helicopter Tuesday in the Jabalya area of the Gaza Strip, the medics
said.
The
Israeli army is also ready for a massive incursion into large swathes
of the Gaza Strip, only waiting orders for moving, Israeli Yedioth
Aharanot reported.
“The
army is ready to resume land operations deep into the Gaza Strip,”
the paper quoted senior officers in the army’s southern district
command.
Israel
had earlier withdrawn from some parts of the Gaza Strip following the
truce. Palestinians had then considered the pullouts with skepticism.