Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israel intimidates Gazans via text messaging |
2009-01-09 |
Israel and Hamas have opened a new front in the two-week old war in Gaza, using text messages, phone calls and leaflets to intimidate and influence the other side. Palestinians say they have been receiving daily phone calls and text messages from the Israeli army warning them against supporting Hamas and asking for information about the whereabouts of its members. Hamas, in turn, said it has sent menacing text messages to Israeli mobile phones and jammed radio stations, according to a report over the weekend in the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper. "The messages say that the Palestinian resistance missiles will reach you wherever you are and your government won't be able to protect you," Abu Mujaheid, spokesman for the Palestinian Resistance Committees, was quoted as saying. According to Israeli Ynet news dozens of Israelis have received text messages in Hebrew that read: "Rockets on all cities, shelters not protect, Qassam rocket, Hamas. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Haniya urges Palestinians to prevent all-out civil war |
2007-01-11 |
![]() Haniya's Islamic Hamas group, which controls the Cabinet and parliament, and the more moderate Fatah, headed by President Mahmoud Abbas, have been engaged in bloody street battles that have killed 35 Palestinians over the past month. Haniya said the fighting "will please enemies of the Palestinians, who want to see civil war." Haniya spoke a day after Hamas-linked militants gave their first word on the condition of an Israeli soldier they captured more than six months ago. "Gilad Shalit is in good health and is being treated according to Islamic standards of dealing with prisoners of war," said Abu Mujahid of the Palestinian Resistance Committees, a militant group linked to Hamas. "We are ready to keep him for years, as long as our demands are not met." |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Palestinian faction proclaims martyr in Israeli air raid |
2006-11-04 |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Debka: Sema Dana named Security Chief |
2006-04-22 |
Hamas names notorious terror operative, Jemal Abu Sema Dana, to high office with responsibility for Palestinian security services. Palestinian interior minister Said Siam announced Thursday that he had selected as director-general of his ministry the founder of the Palestinian Resistance Committees, manager of the Palestinian arms smuggling tunnels and Middle East gunrunner. DEBKAfile adds: Sema Dana tops the list of wanted terrorists for engineering the murder of three American security contractors in the Gaza Strip three years ago, a long line terrorist attacks that claimed Israeli lives and more recently running the Qassam missile offensive. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Palestinians commandeer the Rafah crossing (updated) |
2005-12-30 |
Armed Palestinians commandeer the Rafah crossing Friday shutting down the Gaza-Egypt border terminal indefinitely. The European monitors fled to the Israeli border facility at Kerem Shalom DEBKAfile reported Sunday, Dec. 25, on the threat by Jemal Abu Sema Dana, head of the Palestinian Resistance Committees chief and Fatah al-Aqsa Brigades, to seize the Rafah terminal and âcleanseâ it of foreign monitors. This latest incident signals the final breakdown of agreed measures for securing the Palestinian-Egyptian border built into the international understandings that permitted Israeli troops to withdraw from Gaza. None of these measures are now working, regardless of Israeli government claims to the contrary, especially by defense minister Shaul Mofaz and security coordinator Amos Gilead. Palestinians sources are covering up the seizure by terrorists of the only Palestinian exit point by depicting it as a police blockade in protest against the killing of a fellow officer Thursday. More Details: Palestinian policemen angry over the killing of a fellow officer stormed the Gaza-Egypt border crossing Friday, firing in the air and forcing European monitors to flee and close the crossing for several hours, officials said. About 100 policemen stormed the Rafah compound and took up positions alongside border patrol officers at the customs section of the crossing, Palestinian security officials and witnesses said. Hours after the European observers â responsible for monitoring the crossing and ensuring the terms of an Israeli-Palestinian agreement are upheld â fled, Julio De La Guardia, spokesman for the monitors, said the situation had been brought under control and the border would be reopened later Friday. It was not immediately clear how the incident was resolved. The policemen who stormed the border crossing were friends and family of an officer killed Thursday in a family feud in Gaza, Palestinian security officials said. They said no Palestinian officials would be allowed to leave Gaza until the gunman responsible was executed, according to officials. The policemen shut the border's main gate and fired in the air when a car carrying an unidentified Palestinian official tried to enter the compound. The chief Palestinian security officer at the crossing asked the policemen to leave, but they refused. The border had been closed because according to the Israeli-Palestinian agreement the crossing cannot operate if the European contingent is not present, said De La Guardia. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Paleos: 'We have rocket that has 25 km range' |
2005-12-26 |
![]() "but no directional control - it could land in Egypt for all we know" If true, the range of the new rocket, named Grad, would include the southern towns of Ashkelon, Ofakim and Netivot. A group spokesman warned that the rockets would be used if Israel creates a buffer zone in northern Gaza. playing chicken with someone armed way better than you on a national holiday? "Suicidal" doesn't begin to explain Paleo psychoses Also on Monday, a spokesman for the Palestinian Resistance Committees said the group had managed to extend the range of its rockets to 15 kilometers. The claims of improved rocket technology came as Palestinians fired three Kassam rockets at southern Israel. No injuries or damage were reported. lol One rocket landed near a kindergarten in a kibbutz near Gaza during a Hanukka party that was attended by 50 children. A second Kassam was fired at Sderot and landed in an open field. The landing spot of the third was still undetected, although the Red Dawn warning system in Sderot identified a firing towards Ashkelon. "Can you |
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Israel-Palestine |
Palestinian Security Forces Clash With Militant Group in Gaza |
2005-06-11 |
I don't know how the NYT can report this stuff with a straight face. Palestinian militants and security forces exchanged fire for five hours early Saturday in Gaza, the second day in a row of armed clashes. The house of the Gaza commander of preventive security, Gen. Rashid Abu Shbak, was shot up by the militants, who also fired a rocket-propelled grenade at it, witnesses said. Witnesses reported at least three wounded, but officially, no injuries were reported, and no arrests have been made. Militants have staged demonstrations and clashed with security forces because they say they are being denied jobs in the Palestinian security services and because they are angry at being asked to stop displaying their guns in public. The latest shootout stemmed from an argument on Thursday night when officers of the Gaza preventive security forces stopped a car containing two members of the Palestinian Resistance Committee, a local militant group with good relations with Hamas and Islamic Jihad. The militants refused to leave the car and drove away, and Abu Abeer, a spokesman for the resistance committee, said the police shot up the car and wounded Mohmen Doghmosh in the foot and shoulder. Mr. Doghmosh is from a large Gaza family known for its access to weapons. So early this morning, members of the resistance committee and the Doghmosh family and its allies - as many as 40 armed men, witnesses said - shot up the house of General Shbak, fired at his car, and then clashed with preventive security. Mr. Abeer confirmed these details and said the committees were demanding that the policeman who shot Mr. Doghmosh, Raed Abu Hatab, himself be shot in the leg. "We ask the Palestinian Authority to think this way, that all Palestinian blood is equal," Mr. Abeer said. "The people in the resistance are also partners in making decisions and in protecting the Palestinian house, equal with the Palestinian Authority and security forces." The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, has said he wants to restore order in Gaza and wants "one government, one law and one gun." But he returned to the West Bank from Gaza on Saturday without commenting on the shootout, after meetings with Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which sent lower-level representatives in what was seen as an insult reflecting their anger at the postponement of legislative elections. Mr. Abbas, as part of his discussions with the militants to get them to continue to abide by a truce with Israel, agreed to release nine Islamic Jihad militants who had been jailed in the West Bank city of Jericho after a Feb. 25 suicide bombing at the Stage nightclub in Tel Aviv that killed five Israelis. Two of the prisoners, Sadiq Odeh and Jasser Kob, were released late Thursday night after the Palestinian Authority decided that they had not been involved in the bombing. All the militants are supposed to remain at home in Jericho. Israeli officials have interpreted Mr. Abbas's actions as a sign of weakness. They say he will have to confront the militants and show that the Palestinian Authority is the supreme power in the territories or lose his credibility. Tawfiq Abu Khoussa, a spokesman for the Palestinian Interior Ministry in Gaza, said about the shootout on Saturday: "We're investigating. And we won't stay silent to those who violate the public order." But he confirmed that no one had been arrested. Asked about the demand to shoot Mr. Hatab in the leg, he added: "We stand for the law." |
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