[Mb-civic] Israeli tanks enter north Gaza BBC
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Sep 8 13:02:48 PDT 2004
Israeli tanks enter north Gaza
At least 20 Israeli tanks accompanied by bulldozers and attack helicopters
have sealed off parts of northern Gaza.
The armour took up position overnight outside the towns of Beit Hanoun,
Beit Lahiya and the Jabaliya refugee camp.
The move targeted Palestinians who have been sending rockets into Jewish
areas - more than 20 were fired in the last day, the BBC's Alan Johnston
reports.
Heavy gunfire was used to stop crowds gathering, injuring six Palestinians,
medical officials and witnesses say.
The latest rockets to hit Israel were fired on Wednesday morning. They
landed in the Negev desert, causing no injuries, an army spokesman said.
Hamas arrest
Earlier, Palestinian militants fired mortars and rockets at the Israeli
border town of Sderot. The Israeli tanks were seen moving into northern Gaza
at just before dawn.
The operation is to "stop and prevent the firing of more rockets at Israeli
towns", Reuters quoted the Israeli military source as saying.
However, our correspondent says Israel is finding it hard to counter Hamas'
strategy of randomly rocketing civilian areas - a recent occupation of
northern Gaza failed to stop the flurry of rockets.
Meanwhile, two Israeli soldiers were hurt during an operation to arrest a
Hamas militant in the West Bank town of Hebron, the Israeli army said.
Revenge
On Tuesday, Hamas vowed vengeance for 14 of its members who were killed in
an overnight strike in Gaza City.
Tens of thousands of people thronged the streets of the city for the
funerals of the militants.
Israel said it launched missiles on a Hamas training exercise being carried
out around midnight at a sports ground in the east of the city.
Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei denounced the attack, and said a
Palestinian response would be justified.
Israel has itself vowed to take action against Hamas, after the group
claimed responsibility for the 31 August suicide bombings of two buses in
Beersheba, that killed 16 people.
But Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the air strike on Hamas members was
not in revenge for Beersheba, but rather "part of our continuous war against
terrorism".
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/3636462.stm
Published: 2004/09/08 10:18:16 GMT
© BBC MMIV
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list