Shaul
(24
Dec 2006)
"Gunbattles Rage Between
Hamas and Fatah"
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) -- A fierce gunbattle
broke out
between Hamas and Fatah militants in Gaza City early
Friday,
underscoring the fragility of a two-day old truce that
had largely
ended factional violence there.
The street battle erupted when Hamas militiamen tried
to
free two kidnapped militants, including a senior member
of the
Islamic group. It died down after 20 minutes as Muslim
clerics and
other mediators worked to restore the cease-fire. Nobody
was hurt
despite the battle's intensity, health officials said.
Hamas said its fighters exchanged fire with Fatah-affiliated
militants behind the abductions. The fight quickly spread,
drawing
in guards outside the residence of Palestinian President
Mahmoud
Abbas of Fatah, and Hamas militiamen guarding the home
of Foreign
Minister Mahmoud Zahar of Hamas Zahar. Abbas was not
in Gaza at the
time.
Meanwhile, Palestinians stepped up rocket attacks on
Israel,
including one that veered off course and hit a Gaza home,
injuring a
2-year-old Palestinian boy sleeping in his bedroom, officials
aid.
Six other rockets landed in Israel, but nobody was hurt.
The
barrage threatened a separate cease-fire between Israel
and the
Palestinians that ended months of Israeli military activity
in the
Gaza strip.
A minister in Olmert's Cabinet said it was time to call
off
the cease-fire.
"Enough restraint," Binyamin Ben-Eliezer told Israel
Radio.
"Israel is many things, but a suicidal state isn't one
of them."
A week of factional violence in Gaza has killed 16 people
and left dozens injured across Gaza before the truce
took effect
Tuesday night.
Hamas blamed the Thursday night kidnappings on a clan
affiliated with Fatah that was trying to avenge the deaths
of two
its members in an earlier round of fighting.
In Friday's battle, gunmen on rooftops fired at others
in
the streets. The presidential guard took up defensive
positions
behind newly built walls of sandbags and barriers of
cement blocs
outside Abbas' residence.
Hamas officials said the Fatah gunmen shot at Zahar's
home.
One witness said several rocket-propelled grenades were
also
launched. Residents said they put their children in bathtubs
for
protection against stray bullets. Others tucked themselves
in
corners for safety.
The militant group Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility
for
some of the rockets that landed in Israel, including
one that hit a
community center the southern town of Sderot. The army
said the
rocket caused some damage but nobody was hurt.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the
attack that struck the Gaza home. In the past, similar
cases of
Palestinians being hurt by Palestinian rockets have led
to
backlashes against militant groups, whose attacks against
Israel are
generally supported by the public.
The boy, Samir al-Masri, suffered two broken legs, said
Dr.
Said Judeh of Kamal Adwan hospital. The boy's 4-year-old
sister and
3-year-old brother were lightly wounded by shrapnel,
said their
uncle, Jad al-Masri.
Abbas, a moderate, has repeatedly called for an end to
rocket fire, saying they only invite harsh Israeli retaliation.
In the West Bank town of Ramallah, Abbas said he hoped
to
hold a long-awaited summit with Olmert by the end of
the year.
"We always showed our willingness to hold this meeting
with
Olmert, and it's no secret that we hope it will take
place before
the end of this year," Abbas said at a news conference
with the
visiting Italian foreign minister, Massimo D'Alema. "There
is
progress in preparations for this meeting."
The two leaders have repeatedly expressed readiness to
meet
for what would be their first summit. But preparations
have bogged
down amid disagreements over the agenda.
Abbas wants Israel to promise to release hundreds of
Palestinian prisoners. Olmert has ruled out a prisoner
release until
Hamas-linked militants free an Israeli soldier they captured
last
June. Olmert's spokesman, Jacob Galanti, said he was
not aware of
firm plans for a meeting.