Wednesday, August 22, 2007

EU to resume Gaza power aid on provisional basisAgencies

Comment:The EU is trying to isolate Hamas-they have put all of their political currency in Abbas. Those who understand and know what must be done are simply shaking their heads with such actions. Abbas has already been in talks with Hamas-this EU stanch is nonsense and is but another example of "gamesmanship"-we expect more out of international leaders.

THE EUROPEAN UNION said it will resume financing fuel deliveries to the Gaza Strip’s sole power plant on Wednesday, after five days of blackouts in the impoverished Palestinian territory. The EU suspended financing fuel deliveries for Gaza’s power plant - which provides some 25 per cent of electricity in the territory - over fears that the Islamist Hamas movement would benefit from the aid.
An EU spokeswoman said in a statement from Brussels that the European Commission will “resume Wednesday, on a provisional basis, deliveries of fuel to the Gaza power plant”.

It left open the possibility that financing could be suspended again if it could not be sure that Hamas was interfering with the aid.
The EU blacklists Hamas as a terror group and refuses to have any dealings with the Islamists. If it provides fuel to a power plant, and Hamas earns money from that plant’s production, the bloc could be seen to be indirectly financing the movement.
The EU had said it would resume payments as soon as it was given assurances to the contrary by the Islamists, who seized control in Gaza in mid-June from the Palestinian Authority.

The EU said its decision came after its delegates met new Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad in the West Bank town of Ramallah, but linked future actions to the results of “audits to ensure the fuel aid in Gaza remains properly managed”.
Dor Allon, the private Israeli firm tasked with supplying fuel to Gaza, confirmed in a statement that fuel deliveries would resume on Wednesday, “following a request from EU officials”.

Parts of Gaza have suffered from blackouts since late Friday, when the power plant reduced output because of dwindling fuel supplies.

The territory has been humming with generators to compensate for the cuts, but many families and shops without alternate power supplies saw perishable food stocks rot in their refrigerators.

Hamas had earlier denied it had diverted money from the electricity company after it seized control of Gaza two months ago and said it would provide guarantees that the utility would function independently.

It said the power cuts had amounted to a “collective punishment of the residents of Gaza [which] violates all international values and norms”.
The decision to resume funding for fuel was announced after Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said he gave assurances to the EU that his government had no plans to introduce any taxes on electricity generated by the plant.
“We did not do it and we will not do it,” said Haniyeh, prime minister of the Hamas-led government that was sacked by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fateh after Gaza’s takeover by the Islamists in June.

Israeli forces kill 3 gunmen, 2 boys in Gaza
Israeli missiles killed three Palestinians and two young boys in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, Palestinian officials said, intensifying tensions two months after Hamas seized control of the territory.
A Palestinian ministry health official said the two boys - aged 11 and 12 - were in an area close to where Gaza fighters had fired rockets into Israel. Three other boys were wounded, the official said.
The Israeli army said its forces fired on two Palestinians who were standing next to a rocket launcher soon after militants fired into Israel.
The Palestinian deaths came one day after an Israeli missile strike killed six Hamas activists in one of the deadliest attacks since the Islamist group routed Abbas’ secular Fateh forces in the Gaza Strip.

An Israeli army spokesman said the three militants killed earlier on Tuesday were attacked because they were seen operating near the border fence.
Residents initially reported a missile strike on a car, but witnesses later said the gunmen, identified as members of the Islamic Jihad militant group, were on foot.
Palestinian ambulance crews collected three bodies at the scene, and witnesses said the men were in military-style clothing.

In the occupied West Bank, Israeli troops killed a Palestinian militant in the city of Nablus, Palestinian medical staff said.

Residents from a refugee camp in Nablus said 38-year-old Nasser Mabrouk of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a secular militant group, was killed during a clash with Israeli troops.

An Israeli army spokeswoman said troops had shot a gunman.

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