Text Only
Search

Palestinian Factions Clash in Gaza


09 January 2007

There were more clashes Tuesday between Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip. VOA's Jim Teeple reports at least five Hamas militants were wounded in the fighting, which came just three days after Palestinian factions agreed to a truce.

Violence broke out after five Hamas militants were seized by Fatah militants loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The five were later released but attacked as they left the area where they had been detained.

Palestinians protesting against the upsurge in violence in the West Bank city of Ramallah
Palestinians protesting against the upsurge in violence in the West Bank city of Ramallah
The clashes came after the two factions agreed to a truce several days ago. Tension have risen dramatically since Saturday, when President Abbas said a Hamas force of about 6,000 gunmen known as the Executive Force was illegal and must be immediately integrated into Palestinian security forces under his direct control. Hamas officials have rejected the call saying efforts to disband the force would be resisted.

Fatah militants in the West Bank have also stepped attacks against Hamas officials and sympathizers in the West Bank, where Hamas is considerably weaker than in the Gaza Strip. Atta Abu Remelleh, a leading Fatah militia leader near the West Bank city of Jenin says Fatah will not allow the situation in the West Bank to deteriorate as it has in Gaza.

Remelleh says the situation in Gaza is beginning to resemble Iraq and Fatah will not allow that to happen in the West Bank.

Fatah and Hamas have been feuding ever since Hamas won legislative elections one year ago, taking control of the Palestinian Authority. Talks between the two factions to create a coalition government collapsed in December, and President Abbas, said he would call new legislative and presidential elections - to decide once and for all who governs the Palestinian territories - Fatah or Hamas. Hamas called the move illegal, and effectively a coup.

Violence in the Gaza Strip spiked last week when Hamas militants killed a senior Fatah security official and seven of his bodyguards in a rocket attack on the officials' home in Gaza. Shortly before he was killed the official phoned a Palestinian television station on his cell phone - which broadcast his pleas for help to a large audience - raising tensions to a new level.

Meanwhile, a Palestinian militant group that is one of three organizations claiming to hold an Israeli soldier captured on the Gaza border last June said Tuesday the soldier, Gilad Shalit, was in good health and is being treated well. The group known as the Palestinian Resistance Committees says however that Shalit will not be released unless Israel agrees to release more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has said he is prepared to release some Palestinians in exchange for Shalit. However Israeli officials said recently there had been no significant progress in Egyptian-brokered negotiations aimed at prisoner swap.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Leaders of Warring Palestinian Factions Agree to Truce
Fatah Rally Draws Tens of Thousands in Gaza
 
  Top Story
Obama Ends Ghana Visit

  More Stories
China Rushing Supplies to Quake-Hit Zone
Obama Addresses Africans from Ghana  Audio Clip Available
Iraqi Shi'ite Lawmakers Protest British Troop Extension
Iranian Foreign Minister Says Tehran Preparing 'Package' for West
Pakistan: Trial of Mumbai Attackers to Start Next Week
Obama Urges Patience on Economic Recovery
Reports: New Evidence Points to N. Korean in Cyber Attacks
Mugabe Calls For Unity; Slams Western Nations
Report: Bush Administration Surveillance Program Legally Questionable
New York Times: Bush Team Discouraged Probe of Mass Taliban Deaths
China Increases Police Presence on Xinjiang
Honduras Talks End with No Agreement
US Braced for H1N1 Swine Flu Return  Video clip available
Gary in Indiana Hosts Michael Jackson Memorial  Audio Clip Available
Republic of Congo to Hold Presidential Election
Catholic Church in Kenya Promotes Alternative to Female Circumcision  Video clip available