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Israel to keep razing Gaza houses

By Associated Press
Published May 17, 2004

JERUSALEM - Despite U.S. criticism, Israel plans to demolish hundreds more homes in a Palestinian refugee camp if violence and weapons smuggling persist there, officials said Sunday after one of the bloodiest weeks in the current round of fighting.

Israeli also plans to make wider use of airstrikes in Gaza, the Israeli defense minister was quoted as telling the Israeli Cabinet. Missile strikes tend to be more lethal than other means of fighting.

Early today, Israeli helicopters fired five missiles into an office run by Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement in Gaza City, witnesses said. No one was hurt in the attack, which came just after midnight. The Israeli military would say only that the airstrike was aimed at two offices in the same building that were "focal points for terrorism."

The small Democratic Front also has an office there.

On Sunday evening, Israeli troops killed three Palestinians trying to plant a bomb on the border fence between Israel and Gaza, Israel Radio reported. The military said soldiers fired at suspicious Palestinians, and explosives they were carrying detonated, killing them. Earlier, Israel Radio reported that four Palestinians were killed.

Also Sunday, Israeli troops clashed with armed Palestinians south of the West Bank city of Hebron, the military said. One of the Palestinian was hit.

The warnings came after 13 Israeli soldiers were killed in the Gaza Strip last week. The high death toll has galvanized a popular campaign for a withdrawal from Gaza, with more than 100,000 Israelis rallying in Tel Aviv over the weekend - one of the largest demonstrations here in recent years.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon wants to withdraw from Gaza, but his plan of "unilateral disengagement" has been vetoed by his Likud Party, and the military instead is intensifying its strikes against armed Palestinians.

The main area of recent friction has been the Rafah refugee camp on Gaza-Egypt border, where seven Israeli soldiers were killed last week - five in an explosion on a border patrol road and two by sniper fire in the camp.

In response, army bulldozers demolished 88 houses in Rafah on Friday, according to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which aids refugees. The demolitions left about 1,000 Palestinians homeless, UNRWA said.

House demolitions have been condemned by international human rights groups as collective punishment, and on Sunday, the practice drew rare U.S. criticism of Israeli policy.

"We don't think that is productive," Secretary of State Colin Powell said at the World Economic Forum in Jordan. "We know Israel has a right for self-defense, but the kind of actions that they're taking in Rafah with the destruction of Palestinian homes, we oppose."

At the weekly meeting of the Israeli Cabinet, the army chief, Lt. Gen. Moshe Yaalon, told ministers that the military has marked hundreds of homes along the border for demolition if violence continues, participants said.

The homes would be razed in order to widen the Israeli patrol road between the camp and the border with Egypt. The road is 6 miles long and initially was 25 yards wide.

Since the outbreak of fighting, Israeli troops have torn down hundreds of Rafah homes abutting the road, and widened the buffer zone to about 200 yards in some areas. The Associated Press, quoting a senior Israeli army officer who spoke on condition of anonymity, reported that the military wants to widen the entire zone to up to 250 yards, which could require the destruction of many more houses.

Israel TV's Channel Two said the army is also considering digging a huge trench between the camp and the patrol road to prevent Palestinians from digging tunnels through which weapons are smuggled from Egypt.

Israeli forces often enter the camp searching for tunnels, and Palestinian militants confront them with guns and bombs, making the squalid camp, home to 90,000 refugees, a constant flashpoint.

Israel's Supreme Court on Sunday cleared the way for more demolitions, rejecting a petition to prevent the razing of 13 houses in Rafah. The three judges said the army had a "real, imminent need" that justified the demolitions.

Raji Sourani, director of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, said house demolitions violate the Geneva Conventions and appealed to nations that signed them to intervene.

Peter Hansen, the UNRWA chief, said he was "extremely alarmed" by Israel's plans to take down more homes.

At the Cabinet meeting, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said he would step up military activity, according to officials briefing reporters. During fighting that followed the attacks on the soldiers, 32 Palestinians were killed.

Mofaz noted that Israel had carried out a number of airstrikes on militant targets in recent days.

"We started continuous airstrikes. We will deepen the fighting," Mofaz said, according to the officials.

[Last modified May 16, 2004, 23:15:20]


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