Monday, December 01, 2008

Navy set to stop Gaza-bound Libyan boat


YAAKOV KATZ, Herb Keinon and Shelly Paz , THE JERUSALEM POST

Israel will likely stop a Libyan boat that on Monday is scheduled to try and sail into the Gaza Strip port, defense officials said on Sunday.

Independent Palestinian lawmaker Jamal Khoudari said the ship was carrying food, medicine, blankets and powdered milk, and after docking in Egypt, was set to sail from a Libyan Port to Gaza on Monday. "This ship is coming to Gaza to help the Palestinian people who are under siege," Khoudari told The Jerusalem Post by phone from Gaza. "This ship is safe and will help us since it is carrying food and medicine. There is no reason to stop it."

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense Minister Ehud Barak met Thursday night to discuss the ship and according to officials, decided not to allow it to arrive in Gaza. The Israeli Navy has been put on high alert and ships have been given orders to stop the boat as it enters Israeli waters.

"We will treat this boat different than the earlier ones that were allowed into Gaza," one official said. "Libya is a hostile state to Israel and what guarantees do we have that the boat is not carrying weapons and explosives for Hamas?"

Senior Foreign Ministry officials said a decision on whether to allow the boat in would only be taken when it approached Israel's territorial waters. A spokesman for Olmert declined comment.

Since September Israel has allowed into the Gaza Strip three boats chartered by the US-based Free Gaza movement that set sail from Cyprus.

Meanwhile, Barak decided to keep the crossings into the Gaza Strip closed on Monday after the Kassam landed in Sderot, sending one person into shock. Another rocket landed in an open field, causing no harm.

MK Zevulun Orlev's visit to Sderot's hesder yeshiva on Sunday was interrupted by a Kassam rocket that fell only a few hundred meters from where he was standing.

"I came to the yeshiva to check the progress of fortifying the institute, where 500 students are under daily threat," Orlev said. "The rabbi of the yeshiva and I were sitting in his office, which is not protected, when the alarm was activated. We started running to the nearest concrete shelter, and while we were running we heard the distant explosion of a Kassam. The second we took shelter, another Kassam exploded. This time it sounded close, probably 200 meters from us." Though Orlev, a leader of the now-defunct National Religious Party, was shaken, he did not think residents of the area should leave Sderot and the surrounding towns and Kibbutzim.

"I don't think they're the ones who need to leave, but that this government should be replaced. It's clear that the IDF will have to operate inside the Gaza Strip sooner or later, and I believe that the longer we wait, the more victims this operation will cost us," he said.

He added that the truce with Hamas was "a fool's peace," and false.

"Eventually, Israel will have to face Hamas, which in the meantime is gaining strength and arms," he said.

The government informed the High Court on Sunday that it will allocate money to complete the construction of security rooms for all 8,000 families living in a radius of 4.5 kilometers from the Gaza Strip. The state's representative, Attorney Aner Hellman, asked the court to give it until December 10 to submit a definitive statement after the cabinet meets on Sunday to approve the decision.

The funding, estimated at about NIS 500 million, will be allocated as part of a government emergency program to cope with an anticipated recession as a result of the world economic crisis. In February, the government allocated funding to build security rooms for 3,000 of the 8,000 families.

Dan Izenberg contributed to this report.
This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com /servlet/Satellite?cid=1227702378402&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

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