Israeli Raid Kills Three More Palestinians in Northern Gaza

Author: 
Ibrahim Barzak, Associated Press
Publication Date: 
Fri, 2006-11-03 03:00

GAZA CITY, 3 November 2006 — Israeli helicopter gunships, tanks and ground troops tightened their grip yesterday on a northern Gaza town, killing an elderly civilian and two militants in Israel’s biggest push in months to stop Palestinian rocket fire.

Amid the clashes, men between the ages of 16 and 40 were ordered over loudspeakers to gather in one of the main squares of Beit Hanoun, but few complied. The army, which took over the town Wednesday, said it wanted to interrogate the men to detain those connected to militant activities.

Defiant militants kept up their attacks on southern Israel, firing homemade rockets from elsewhere in Gaza, the army said.

One rocket hit a house in the nearby Israeli town of Sderot, lightly injuring one person, the army said. Hamas militants claimed responsibility for the attack.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas said the offensive was aimed at crushing the Palestinians’ spirit.

“But we are completely sure this will fail, as all previous campaigns failed...and the Palestinians will remain steadfast,” he said.

Troops moved into Beit Hanoun on Wednesday because it was a major launching ground for the 800 rockets fired at southern Israel since the beginning of the year, the army said.

Eleven Palestinians have been killed in the fighting, including at least nine militants. A 70-year-old civilian was killed yesterday, as were two militants — including a bodyguard to Haniyeh, who was not in the area at the time, relatives and security officials said.

The raid crippled the town of 50,000, with curfews imposed on some areas, and residents of others too afraid to venture from their homes.

Helicopter gunships on two separate missions sent missiles hurtling into the town early yesterday, but no injuries were reported. About 50 tanks patrolled the town, while other tanks fired dozens of rounds into Beit Hanoun from the other side of the Israeli-Gaza border.

Snipers, meanwhile, took up position on at least a dozen rooftops, while other troops carried out house-to-house searches for weapons and militants.

Militants fought back with small arms, hand grenades, rocket-propelled grenades and land mines.

Israeli tanks parked on the town’s main streets, and bulldozers surrounded them with sand embankments to protect them from rocket fire. Much of the town’s open space had already been razed by the army in previous operations to provide staging areas for tanks and to allow troops better visibility to monitor militant activity.

“We will not allow Beit Hanoun to serve as a launching pad for missile attacks against Israel,” said David Baker, a spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

Other Israeli officials said the takeover of Beit Hanoun was expected to last only a few days and did not signal the start of a wider-scale Gaza offensive.

On Wednesday, Israel’s Security Cabinet rejected proposals for a major escalation against rocket squads and arms smuggling operations along the Egypt-Gaza border.

Israel has several reasons not to launch such an offensive now.

Olmert is to meet US President George W. Bush later this month, and is wary that a major escalation in Gaza could overshadow the trip. A wider offensive could also harm negotiations for the release of Cpl. Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier kidnapped in June by militants allied with the Palestinians’ ruling Hamas party, and hinder attempts by moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to form a new Palestinian government acceptable to the West.

An escalation could also impede US efforts to improve security and cut down on arms smuggling at the Egypt-Gaza border.

US National Intelligence Director John Negroponte met in Cairo on Wednesday with his Egyptian counterpart, Omar Suleiman. Arab diplomats said Negroponte proposed that Egypt allow a US-led team of multinational peace monitors to help police the border with Gaza.

He also proposed that CIA counterterrorism experts assist in efforts to halt cross-border smuggling, said the diplomats, who insisted on anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

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