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Before redeploying around al-Khalil, Israeli soldiers abducted several Palestinians
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JENIN,
Occupied West Bank, October 25 (IslamOnline & News agencies) -
Hundreds of Israeli troops poured into the West Bank town of Jenin
Friday, October 25, whereas army bulldozers, trailers and jeeps took
over a Palestinian area south of Gaza City to set up a military post,
news agencies reported.
In
what the Israeli occupation forces called “an operation to root out
Islamic (resistance) activists thought to have master-minded a bombing
attack in Israel earlier this week, the army launched its largest West
Bank offensive in three months, according to Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
At
least 40 tanks, jeeps and armored vehicles rolled into Jenin before
dawn as troops hunted about 20 wanted men in connection with the
bombing that torched a packed bus Monday, October 21, in northern
Israel.
Palestinian
security and hospital sources said five Palestinians were hit by
Israeli gunfire in the Friday aggression, including a 17-year-old boy
who was seriously wounded.
Soldiers
were shooting at anyone out on the streets as they carried out
house-to-house searches and enforced a curfew, the sources said.
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Palestinian boys do not have the right to carry computers |
Contrasting
with the move on Jenin, the army announced it had withdrawn from the
Palestinian sector of the divided West Bank city of Hebron, but was
keeping soldiers on two strategic hillsides to guard against snipers.
Defending the army's tactics in the West Bank, which the international
community criticized for imposing great hardship on Palestinians
civilians, Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer called Jenin
a "capital of terrorism".
"It
is impossible to go ahead with the easing of sanctions (against the
civilian population) when we are obliged to defend our homes from
attacks by suicide bombers and car bombs," Ben Eliezer told
public radio.
Observers,
however, offered Ben Eliezer and another Israeli leaders another
“possible and peaceful solution”; to withdraw their troops from
occupied Palestinian territories, and to give real peace a chance.
The
Israeli army reoccupied most of the West Bank in mid-June after a wave
of bombing attacks and has since imposed blanket curfews and blocked
off cities in an attempt to foil attacks.
An
army officer said the Jenin offensive, code-named "Operation
Vanguard," was launched in response to the Monday bombing,
claimed by the Islamic Jihad resistance group.
"Out
of some 250,000 people in the Jenin area, we are looking for a cell of
no more than 20 terrorists who are bringing misery to everyone,"
the officer said.
Israel
is trying to term “legal Palestinian resistance against
occupation” as terrorism.
In
Gaza City, meanwhile, Israeli army bulldozers, trailers and jeeps took
over a Palestinian area south of Gaza City Friday apparently to set up
a small military post there, an AFP correspondent at the scene
reported.
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They are all terrorists, as far as Israel is concerned |
Soldiers
fired shots at a group of journalists near the building site, which
lies next to the Israeli settlement of Netzarim where the army has a
full-fledged base, the reporter said.
An
Israeli military source dismissed the information, claiming only that
the army was "improving the road for the Palestinian population
there."
Arriving
at the scene, the Palestinian security chief in Gaza, General Abdul
Razeq al-Majeida, said "the army is constructing a new military
base by Netzarim close to the sea, which is very dangerous for the
lives of civilians.
"The
Gaza Strip is now under occupation, tanks are around every town. With
this, there will be no safe road from the north to the south of the
strip," he said.
"This
is against agreements and understandings with us," he said about
the deployment.
In
a separate incident, Israeli tanks carried out a small incursion in
the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah, destroying a house there,
security sources said.
Also
in Rafah, Palestinian security sources said a Palestinian youth shot
dead Thursday by Israeli troops was an unarmed 16-year-old civilian.
An
army spokesman had said the teenager, identified as Mohammed Abu Murr,
fired at a patrol in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah prompting
the army to defend itself.
In
another incident, a Jewish settler was arrested in the northern West
Bank after he opened fire towards a group of Palestinian olive
pickers, Israeli police said Friday.
"The
man shot in the air, 30 meters (yards) away from Palestinians who were
picking olives," a police spokesman said, adding that the
unidentified man from the Eli settlement was still in custody.
The
incident occurred near the Palestinian village of Issawiya, public
radio added.
A
Palestinian was killed and several others wounded by settlers over the
past month in similar incidents at the start of the olive harvest.
The
Israeli rights group B'Tselem said settlers have also harvested olives
belonging to Palestinian farmers.
And in what Palestinians called “redeployment”, Israeli troops
said Friday they started to pull back from most of the Palestinian
autonomous area in the West Bank city of al-Khalil (Hebron), except
for two strategic hillsides.
"The
army has begun to withdraw its units deployed in the Palestinian
sector with the exception of two positions on the hills of Abu Sneineh
and Al-Sheikh," a military official told AFP.
Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon approved the pullback last Sunday.
However,
the redeployment appears to be largely symbolic as troops will remain
on the hills overlooking the sectors where about 600 radical Jewish
settlers live enclaved among 120,000 Palestinians.
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