The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 19, 2005, Page 4, Image 4
Abbas travels to Gaza for cease-fire talks with militants
By IBRAHIM BARZAK
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — In the
biggest test of his brief tenure,
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas
came to the Gaza Strip on Tuesday,
hoping to persuade militants to halt
attacks on Israel. But in a show of
defiance, a Palestinian suicide bomber
blew himself up on a settler road in
Gaza, killing an Israeli security agent
and wounding seven other Israelis.
The Islamic militant group Hamas
claimed responsibility for the attack _
the first suicide bombing against an
Israeli target since Nov. 1.
Before the bombing, Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon warned his
patience was running thin, telling
military commanders the army must
deal with rocket and mortar attacks
against Israelis “at the earliest possible
stage.”
Sharon aide David Baker said
Tuesday’s bombing showed that
“Palestinian terror is increasing.” He
said Israel has been restrained, but “no
country in the world would allow its
citizens to be bombed on a daily basis.”
Israel has come under international
pressure to hold off on any large-scale
raid into Gaza to give Abbas, who took
office Saturday, a chance to cobble
together a cease-fire. The European
Union and Jordan both urged Sharon to
hold off on a raid.
Abbas traveled to Gaza on Tuesday
evening and planned to remain for
several days to tty to work out a deal
with the militants. Palestinian officials
said he met late Tuesday with Islamic
Jihad leaders in a secret location and
then saw Hamas leaders.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zukhri
described the meeting as positive and
said Hamas would consider Abbas'
demand for a cease-fire.
Abbas got a boost from a violent
West Bank group linked to his Fatah
Party, the A1 Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades.
The group’s leader, Zachariya Zubeidi,
said his militants would stop attacks in
Israel as a gesture to Abbas.
But there were no such signs in Gaza.
Just two hours after Abbas arrived, a
Hamas militant blew himself up near an
intersection where a main Palestinian
road crosses an access road to a bloc of
Jewish settlements, killing an Israeli
agent from the Shin Bet security service
and wounding seven Israelis _ four
soldiers and three other agents, the
military said.
Tuesday’s attack marked the first
time a Shin Bet agent was killed in
action since the start of the latest round
of violence in September 2000, the
agency said in a statement.
A Palestinian bystander was also
injured, Palestinian rescue officials said.
Hamas claimed responsibility in an
electronic message sent to The
Associated Press, identifying the bomber
as Omar Tabach, 21, of Gaza. The
militant group dubbed the attack
“Operation Stab in the Heart.”
The agents stopped Tobach at the
junction and took him into an
inspection room where he detonated an
explosive device hidden in his
underwear, the Shin Bet statement said.
The most recent previous suicide
bombing was Nov. 1, when a bomber
killed three Israelis in a Tel Aviv market.
An attack at a Gaza border crossing last
week killed six Israelis.
Immediately after Tuesday’s blast,
Abbas called an emergency meeting of
Gaza security officials, according to
Palestinian officials. The attack
underscores the difficulty Abbas will
have in brokering a cease-fire with the
militant groups, some of which have
decentralized leaderships.
Militants continued to fire mortar
shells and rockets in Gaza Tuesday, but
no one was injured. The army returned
fire, critically wounding a 15-year-old
Palestinian boy, doctors said.
In the West Bank city of Nablus,
meanwhile, about 40 Israeli army
vehicles surrounded a hospital, the
biggest raid there in weeks, residents
said. The military said soldiers were
moving against the “terrorist
infrastructure.”
Some militants have signaled a truce
is possible if Israel stops arrest raids and
targeted killings of wanted Palestinians.
Israel is unwilling to agree to those
conditions.
As part of his efforts to end the
violence, Abbas instructed the
Palestinian security forces on Monday to
try to prevent attacks against Israel and
to investigate last week’s attack at the
Gaza border crossing.
He also appealed Tuesday to Israel to
“stop military attacks against the
Palestinian people, stop incursions, the
assassinations and the building of the
wall (separation barrier), release prisoners
and accept.a mutual cease-fire.”
Palestinian officials declined to say
how Abbas’ orders would be translated
into-action, but Foreign Minister Nabil
Shaath said the Palestinians were serious
about maintaining quiet.
“The Palestinian people will be the
best policemen,” he said. “Once an
agreement is reached, it will be enforced.”
Israel has demanded that, as a
preliminary step, the Palestinians deploy
security forces in the areas in northern
Gaza used to launch the rockets, Israeli
officials said Tuesday.
Abbas called for patience.
Meeting in the West Bank city of
Ramallah, the Palestinian leader told
David Pearce, the U.S. consul-general to
Jerusalem, that he is serious about
dealing with the militants, but needs
time to reach an agreement, according to
a top Palestinian official. The official
said Abbas asked the Americans to
pressure Israel to act with restraint.
Sharon suspended contact with
Abbas after last week’s attack at the
border crossing and threatened a major
raid into Gaza to stop the rocket attacks.
Sharon warned Abbas that Israel’s
patience is wearing thin. “Abu Mazen
doesn’t need a settling-in period. It’s not
as if he doesn’t know what’s happening
in the field,” Sharon said, referring to
Abbas by his nickname.
NASSER NASSER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, right, shakes hands with the U.S. consul in Jerusalem David Pearce during their meeting in the
West Bank city of Ramallah on Jan. 18. Abbas is heading to Gaza Strip on Tuesday for crucial cease-fire talks with militant leaders.
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A NURSING 91
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