Posted on 05/15/2007 9:32:45 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Hamas gunmen riddled a Fatah police jeep with gunfire at close range Tuesday, killing eight policemen in the most ruthless round yet of factional fighting, pushing the Palestinian unity government closer to collapse.
Gunmen in black ski masks took up positions in the streets and terrified residents huddled in their homes. Israel, too, was briefly drawn into the battle.
"I don't know when it's going to end and what the future will bring," said Salman Abu Arafeh, 42, a Gaza City interior decorator who was pinned down by gunfire in his apartment for hours, along with his wife and two children. A total of 15 people were killed in Tuesday's fighting.
An Egyptian mediator said a truce was reached late Tuesday the third in as many nights. The others have collapsed within hours. Around midnight, a car carrying Egyptian officials with Hamas and Fatah representatives came under fire, Hamas officials said, and an Egyptian diplomat was slightly wounded.
Hamas gunmen stormed the home of a top Fatah official early Wednesday in Gaza City, killing five bodyguards inside, Palestinians security officials said. Hamas gunmen fired mortars at the house of Fatah security chief Rashid Abu Shbak before storming it and planting pipe bombs inside, the officials said. Abu Shbak and his family were not home at the time of the attack.
The renewed clashes Wednesday included mortars fired at the presidential compound of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah. No one was wounded in this attack.
On Tuesday, Abbas called for the immediate implementation of a security plan that would put all rival forces under one command. However, his call is unlikely to be heeded: The fighting made it clear the Hamas-Fatah power struggle was never really resolved, despite formation of the unity government in March.
Gaza's turmoil further weakened hopes for a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, despite a new push by the Arab world to bring the sides to the table, based on an offer of Arab recognition of Israel in exchange for an Israeli withdrawal from all lands it occupied in the 1967 Middle East War.
Israel has expressed major reservations, but Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told Jordan's King Abdullah on Tuesday that he's ready to meet with Arab leaders in Israel or anywhere else to talk about the idea. Abdullah, in turn, asked Olmert to set a timetable for reaching a peace deal.
Negotiations, however, are inconceivable if the Palestinians descend into a protracted civil war.
This week's fighting was the worst since Hamas and Fatah agreed to share power in February. In all, at least 28 people have been killed and dozens wounded. Among the injured was a 10-year-old girl caught in the crossfire late Tuesday and critically wounded by a gunshot to the head, Palestinian rescue workers said.
In the deadliest battle, Hamas gunmen fired rockets, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars early Tuesday at a training base for Fatah forces guarding the Karni cargo crossing with Israel. U.S. security experts had helped set up the base to improve security at Karni.
After the initial attack, Hamas fired on Fatah reinforcements rushing to the scene, and one of the jeeps carrying Fatah fighters veered off the road and crashed. Hamas gunmen surrounded the vehicle and riddled it with gunfire, said one witness, who works in a nearby factory.
"It was unbelievable. May God help us," said the man, who gave only his first name, Jamil, out of fear for his safety.
Eight men were killed, hospital officials said. Fatah security men also came under fire as they tried to move the bodies away from the overturned jeep.
Two Israeli helicopter gunships and three tanks moved toward the area, and Hamas fighters quickly withdrew. At one point, a major in the Palestinian Presidential Guard was killed by Israeli army fire as he tried to leave the crossing, security officials said.
Before sundown, Hamas said it fired rockets at Sderot, an Israeli town near Gaza in retaliation for the Israeli attack. Residents counted more than 20 rockets. One rocket hit a house, seriously wounding an Israeli woman. It was the first time in three weeks that Hamas has claimed responsibility for a rocket barrage.
Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz summoned army commanders for late-night consultations. Earlier, defense officials said Israel would not be dragged into the fighting.
However, Israel closed Karni, the only route for cargo into Gaza. The closure means Gaza will soon run out of fuel for its power plant and electricity to most of the strip could be shut down by Wednesday, said Abdel Karim Abdeen, head of the Palestinian Energy Authority.
The current fighting had many of the elements of previous Hamas-Fatah clashes: combatants kidnapped scores of rivals, set up roadblocks to search cars, took over rooftops of high-rises and often fired randomly in crowded residential areas.
Around Abbas' seaside compound in Gaza City, security forces searched cars and inspected motorists' ID cards. They gave those with beards a possible sign of Hamas support an extra close look.
Both sides have become more ruthless this time, with Fatah accused of an execution-style killing of two Hamas supporters Sunday and Hamas ambushing the Fatah jeep Tuesday. This might make it more difficult to negotiate a cease-fire and revive the coalition.
At the core of the fighting is the unresolved power struggle between Hamas, which won parliamentary elections last year, and Abbas' Fatah, which has dominated Palestinian politics for four decades. Squeezed by an international aid boycott, Hamas realized it could not govern alone and brought Fatah into the government. But the two sides never worked out their differences, particularly over security.
While the power-sharing deal largely halted factional fighting for three months, both sides continued to smuggle weapons through tunnels under the Egypt-Gaza border, preparing for the next round.
The spark for the new fighting was deployment of 3,000 Fatah-allied members of the security forces in Gaza City last week, over Hamas' objections. Hamas also has bristled at Abbas' appointment of former Gaza strongman Mohammed Dahlan as his national security adviser.
"Palestinian society is now similar to Lebanese society always in civil war or on the verge of civil war," said analyst Hillel Frisch of Israel's Bar-Ilan University.
"It's going to be cyclical: both sides know the tremendous costs, so they try to contain it, but the problem is simply left unresolved, and is probably unresolvable," he said.
Both sides accused each other of waging a carefully orchestrated campaign to destroy the other.
The National Security, a force loyal to Abbas, said Hamas is leading a military coup against the Palestinian security establishment. A Hamas spokesman, Abdel Latif Kanuah, said Fatah is involved in a U.S.-backed plot to overthrow Hamas, referring to U.S. backing for Abbas' elite forces, the Presidential Guards.
Despite the unity government's shortcomings and its failure to end the international embargo imposed on Hamas it's unlikely Abbas will dissolve it and call early elections. Hamas would consider that an attempt to steal its election victory and likely oppose it violently.
___
Karin Laub contributed to this report from Ramallah, West Bank.

Palestinians look at a bullet riddled vehicle following fighting close to the Karni commercial crossing in the central Gaza Strip. Eight Palestinians were killed when gunmen ambushed a rival force in Gaza on Tuesday as spiralling factional fighting claimed 16 lives, jeopardising the future of a fledgling unity government.(AFP/Mohammed Abed)
Eagle fan fault ROFL

An Israeli girl reacts after her family house was hit by a rocket fired by Palestinian militants in the town of Sderot, , Israel, just outside the Gaza Strip, Tuesday, May, 15, 2007. Hamas on Tuesday said it fired five rockets from Gaza at an Israeli town, hitting a house and school and wounding 17 people, one seriously, the militant group and Israeli military said. It was the first time in three weeks that Hamas has taken responsibility for a rocket attack. (AP Photo/Tsafrir Abayov)

Israelis stand at the scene of a rocket attack in the southern Israeli town of Sderot May 15, 2007. A rocket fired by Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip hit a house in Sderot on Tuesday causing at least two injuries, Israeli emergency services said. REUTERS/Amir Cohen (ISRAEL)

With paintings of late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, left, and Jesus Christ, right, Palestinian women attend a rally to mark the 59th anniversary of the Naqba, or 'The catastrophe' in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Tuesday May 15, 2007. Palestinians commemorate Al Naqba May 15 each year, to mark their displacement by the founding of Israeli in 1948. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
Om a proportionate basis, that's like 500 getting killed in Iraq in one day. (Iraq's population is 27X larger than Gaza).
...Gaza will soon run out of fuel for its power plant and electricity to most of the strip could be shut down by Wednesday, said Abdel Karim Abdeen, head of the Palestinian Energy Authority.
Looks like a very challenging phase ahead. Seems like if Israel would just stand back for a little while then the Palestinians will destroy themselves. On the other hand, a tempting strategy for Israel would involve attacking the Palestinians when they are at their weakest.
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