Sunday, November 22, 2009

IAF jets bomb Gaza targets in retaliation for weekend Kassam

GREER FAY CASHMAN and HERB KEINON , THE JERUSALEM POST

IAF aircraft bombed two Hamas weapons plants in northern and central Gaza Strip overnight Saturday, as well as an arms smuggling tunnel in the southern Strip. According to the IDF Spokesperson's Office, the attack was in response to the Kassam rocket launched at Israel on Saturday morning.

Palestinian sources said five people were wounded in the attack.

On Saturday morning, a Kassam rocket fired from Gaza hit the Sha'ar Hanegev region, causing no casualties or damage.

Israel reacted with little enthusiasm to reports on Saturday that Hamas had reached an agreement with other terrorist groups in Gaza to stop firing rockets at the western Negev.

Hamas's interior minister, Fathi Hamad, told reporters the decision had been made to avoid IDF reactions, according to the Chinese news agency Xinhua.

Hamad added, however, that if Israel sent soldiers into the Strip, the armed groups would be given "free rein to respond."

In response, an official in the Prime Minister's Office said Hamas would "be judged by its actions, not its words."

Under the agreement, rockets will only be fired in retaliation for Israeli aggression, Hamad said.

The Hamas official also told reporters that the aim of the agreement was to "enable people to rebuild" after Operation Cast Lead last winter.

The announcement came as President Shimon Peres prepared to go to Cairo on Sunday for a meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, expected to focus on the diplomatic process with the Palestinians, Iran and kidnapped soldier St.-Sgt. Gilad Schalit.

Peres met with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Friday to discuss the trip.

Officials in the Prime Minister's Office said the visit was completely coordinated, and described Peres as a "national asset" who had a close working relationship with Mubarak.

The officials deflected questions about whether the fact that Peres was going to Egypt, rather than Netanyahu, reflected any difficulties in the relationship between the two leaders, saying that Netanyahu had already gone to Egypt twice since taking office in late March.

The Jerusalem Municipal Planning Committee's recent decision to approve construction of some 900 new homes in the Gilo neighborhood is also expected to come up in the discussions, as Egypt has joined the international chorus opposing the move.

Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki last week termed the decision to go ahead with the construction "provocative" and said it was deplorable and deserved condemnation.

Regarding the diplomatic process, both Peres and Mubarak have expressed hope that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who is currently visiting South America, will remain in office and resume peace negotiations.

Speaking on Saturday in Salvador De Bahia in the presence of Brazilian President Luiz Incio Lula da Silva, Abbas said, "Our people want peace for our children and the Israeli children to live without fear, and look forward to the day when we can live without ugly occupation."

Peres returned on Wednesday from visits to Brazil and Argentina and has two more overseas trips scheduled before the end of January, to Sweden and Germany.

In related news, jailed Tanzim leader and Fatah Central Committee member Marwan Barghouti urged Abbas and the Palestinian factions to lead a "popular resistance" to stop Israel's settlement construction and "Judaizing" activities.

"I have always called for creatively combining negotiations with resistance and political, diplomatic and popular activism," Israel Radio quoted Barghouti on Saturday as telling the PA's Al-Hayat al-Jadida newspaper.

"I warned against relying exclusively on negotiations, but some were late to discover this," he said.

In a message transmitted via his lawyer from the Israeli prison where he has been incarcerated for seven years since being convicted of five murders, Barghouti said there was no Israeli peace partner.

He made similar remarks in October, when he warned that the circumstances that had led to the second intifada still existed, and called on the Palestinians to conduct a "peaceful resistance" campaign.

At the time, the Tanzim leader said that "whoever thinks it's possible to make peace with the current Israeli government is being delusional."

Jerusalem Post staff contributed to this report.
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