Africa North |
Egypt denies 'Post' report of Hamas bases in Sinaii |
2011-12-12 |
![]() An Egyptian official has denied a Jerusalem Post report that Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, has established forward bases and rocket production facilities in the Sinai Peninsula in an effort to protect them from Israeli air strikes. The Post revealed Sunday that Israel has called on Cairo to increase its efforts to restore order in Sinai and to prevent attacks, but the Egyptian military has held back from dismantling the Hamas infrastructure in the peninsula. "No one can ever bring in military tools or erect missile bases in Sinai. Egypt would not allow such a breach to its illusory sovereignty," Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm quoted an Egyptian official as saying in response to the Post report. The official added that Sinai is completely under the control of the Egyptian authorities and that the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel remains in place. He further supported his refutation of the existence of Hamas bases and weapons production facilities in Egypt by pointing to the presence of UN peacekeepers in northern Sinai who, he claimed, would be aware of such a development were it to occur. More than a dozen Egyptian army battalions allowed into Sinai with Israel's permission (required because of limits placed on Egyptian forces there under the peace treaty) are still operating there, although with limited success in stopping terrorist activity and arms smuggling to the Gazoo Strip. Recent arms smuggled into Gazoo have included advanced weaponry stolen from Libyan military storehouses such as Russian- made shoulder-to-air missiles. Israel's primary concern with Sinai is that it is being used by Paleostinians to launch attacks into Israel while taking advantage of the open southern border. The IDF has beefed up its forces along the border and recently established a new regional brigade that is responsible for defending Eilat and nearby areas. On Thursday, the IDF bombed a car traveling in northern Gazoo and killed a senior Aksa Martyrs Brigades operative who the army said was plotting an attack. The Islamic fascisti were supposed to cross from Gazoo into Sinai and then into Israel, similar to the attack that took place in August when eight Israelis were killed. The bombing of the car is part of an IDF understanding that since it cannot operate in Egypt it needs to stop such attacks while they are still in the planning stages in the Gazoo Strip. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Would-be suicide bomber tells Gaza children to be like her |
2011-10-20 |
GAZA - A would-be Paleostinian jacket wallah freed by Israel in the prisoner swap for soldier Gilad Shalit told cheering schoolchildren in the Gazoo Strip the day after her release on Wednesday she hoped they would follow her example. "I hope you will walk the same path we took and God willing, we will see some of you as deaders," Wafa al-Biss told dozens of children who came to her home in the northern Gazoo Strip. Biss was traveling to Beersheba's Soroka hospital for medical treatment in 2005 when Israeli soldiers at the Erez border crossing noticed she was walking strangely. They found 10 kilograms (22 lbs) of explosives had been sewn into her underwear. A member of al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades, an offshoot of Paleostinian Authority President the ineffectual Mahmoud Abbas ... a graduate of the prestigious unaccredited Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow with a doctorate in Holocaust Denial... 's Fatah party, Biss was sentenced to a 12-year term for planning to blow herself up. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Gaza groups squabble over credit for killing Golani soldiers |
2010-03-28 |
![]() Hamas leaders, meanwhile, have taken precautions in anticipation of Israeli reprisal. Some are said to have gone into hiding, while many Hamas-run institutions have been evacuated for fear of being targeted by the IAF. The first to claim responsibility was Hamas's armed wing, Izzadin Kassam, which said its surveillance unit' spotted an IDF unit that had infiltrated the Gaza Strip and was surrounding gunmen belonging to Islamic Jihad's armed wing, the Quds Battalions. According to the Hamas group, its snipers opened fire at the Golani Brigade infantrymen as soon as they entered the Strip and surrounded the Islamic Jihad cell. Hamas militiamen later took to the streets of Khan Yunis and Gaza City to celebrate the killing of the soldiers, eyewitnesses said. Hamas political leaders also rushed to claim responsibility, saying the group maintained the right to prevent the IDF from invading the Gaza Strip. They said the operation was also a gift' to slain Hamas official Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, whom the movement claims was assassinated by Israeli agents in Dubai on January 19. Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for Hamas, said the Khan Yunis incident was a natural response' to daily Israeli aggression on our lands and people, as well as an expression of solidarity with Jerusalem and the Aksa Mosque.' Hamas, he added, won't sit quiet as Israel continues with its attempts to Judaize Jerusalem.' Fatah's armed wing, the Aksa Martyrs Brigades, also rushed to take credit for killing the soldiers. A leaflet distributed by the group in the Gaza Strip claimed that its gunmen opened fire at the IDF unit after they found themselves ambushed. However, journalists in the Strip said Fatah's claim was not being taken seriously by many Palestinians. The main dispute over the attack is now between Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which continues to insist that its men killed the soldiers. According to Islamic Jihad, its men were planting bombs near the border with Israel when they were intercepted by the soldiers. The Golani patrol tried to kill the Islamic Jihad men, but came under fire from nearby, the group said in a statement. Islamic Jihad said that the IDF's version regarding the clash corroborates its claim that the soldiers were killed by gunfire and explosions from close range and not from a distance. Hamas snipers would have had to fire at the soldiers from at least 250 meters away, but even the Zionist enemy' has admitted that the soldiers were not killed by sniper fire, Islamic Jihad spokesmen explained. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
On PA television for kids, Israel is only a fairy tale |
2010-03-19 |
Program teaches children about different areas of Palestine, using a map that includes all of Israel but is simply labeled Palestine.' Palestinian Authority television is broadcasting a new children's show that shows a map of Palestine' that covers the entire territory of the State of Israel, the group Palestinian Media Watch reported on Tuesday. According to PMW, the program Chicks features a recurring segment that teaches children about different areas of Palestine, using a map that includes all of Israel but is simply labeled Palestine.' Next to the map is written in English and Arabic Explore Your Country.' Founder and director of Palestinian Media Watch, Itamar Marcus, said the PAW report was released as part of a campaign to highlight the reinforcement of such messages of delegitimization of Israel that are endemic to Palestinian Authority broadcasting. Marcus said the maps used by official PA bodies are no different from those used by terror groups, saying if you look at Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Aksa Martyrs Brigades, all of these terror groups use the exact same maps as the PA. The only difference is the PA map doesn't have rifles on it.' Marcus said such depictions of Palestine absolutely' symbolize a denial of Israel's right to exist, which is reinforced by the usage of such maps across virtually all sectors of Palestinian society. Marcus also mentioned a children's program on PA TV called The Best Home that refers to Israeli Arab children as Palestinians and tells children living in mixed-cities within Israel like Lod, Ramle, and Beersheba that they live in occupied Palestine.' According to the PMW, the host of the show tells Israeli Arab viewers: Dear children... we will always remain in contact with you, because you have the right, and this program is certainly yours too, just as it belongs to every Palestinian child, since you are part of occupied Palestine.' Marcus said the PMW has also analyzed dozens of Palestinian school books which reinforce this message. The release of the video on Tuesday is part of a PMW campaign to highlight denial of Israel's existence across several different categories of Palestinian society, both civil and governmental. Also on Tuesday, the Middle East Media Research Institute released a video of a program that aired on a Hamas children's television program last week that depicted a girl named Gaza' whose house is destroyed and family killed by the Israel Defense Forces. In the video, Gaza then rose up with all her might' and began throwing stones at an Israeli tank gunner, who promptly opens fire penerting' [sic] Gaza in the chest with machine gun fire. Gaza falls to the ground, but in a sudden reversal of fortune, rises, clad in the colors of the Palestinian flag and hurls the bullet to the eye of that ugly soldier' who is then seen with blood gushing from his eyes. The video then ends with the words many and many children will follow her example, and every day Gaza will be born anew' emblazoned on the screen as the little girl Gaza begins to multiply. Video |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |||
Fatah warns of intifada against PA | |||
2009-12-28 | |||
The killing of the three Fatah operatives in Nablus by the IDF over the weekend could trigger a third intifada, Fatah officials warned on Sunday. But the new intifada, they said, would be different from the first two - this time it would be directed against the Palestinian Authority.
The relationship between the PA and local Fatah activists has always been tense. Nablus and its surrounding refugee camps, especially Balata refugee camp, has long been a stronghold for disgruntled Fatah militiamen who occasionally vent their frustration against the PA leadership and security forces. For years during the second intifada, Nablus, the largest Palestinian city in the West Bank, was controlled by dozens of Fatah gunmen and thugs who imposed a reign of terror on wealthy clans. Many local families did not hide their satisfaction when IDF troops raided the city during Operation Defensive Shield in 2002 and killed or arrested scores of Fatah gunmen, including the infamous Ahmed Tabouk, one of the leaders of the Aksa Martyrs Brigades.
The PA also managed to persuade Israel to stop pursuing those gunmen who agreed to hand over their weapons and abandon violence. In return, the PA took on itself the mission of holding the "pardoned" gunmen in one of its security installations for a limited time and as a first step toward granting them total freedom of movement. Most of the Fatah gunmen who complied were added to the PA's payroll, but not all were happy with the arrangement. Some complained that the PA had broken its promise to appoint them to senior positions in its security forces, while others said that their salaries were too low. Others complained that despite their agreement to surrender their weapons and open a new page in their lives, Israeli security forces were continuing to target them. Friends and relatives of the Fatah operatives who were killed in the recent IDF operation accused the PA of failing to fulfill its "commitments" to give them more money and good jobs. Some did not rule out the possibility that the Fatah cell that murdered Rabbi Meir Chai last week had received money from an "outside" party, such as Hizbullah or even Hamas. n the past, there were a number of cases where Fatah militiamen in the West Bank openly admitted to receiving funds from Hizbullah. The gunmen justified their action by arguing that the PA had failed to "compensate" them for the "sacrifices" they made in the fight against Israel. | |||
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
The Palestinian terrorist and me |
2009-06-20 |
![]() We were in a large conference room on the second floor of the old U.S. Mission in Berlin. He sat at the end of a long, blond-wood conference table, scribbling on a legal pad and sipping coffee from a plastic foam cup. To his left was his partner, a taciturn man in his early 30s. Windows partly concealed by blue drapes looked out over Clayallee, a wide boulevard running through the Western part of the city. No, I said. I havent. We can make it worth your while, said the second man. Youd be serving your country, added the Virginian. No, thanks, I said. The F.B.I.s offer came in October of last year, at the end of a three-hour conversation a private debrief in the nearly deserted building that had been a center of intrigue in cold war Berlin. (Most U.S. Foreign Service staff members had moved across town to the newly opened embassy near the Brandenburg Gate.) Now the building was the location for another intrigue, involving the murder of a U.S. citizen in Bethlehem and a boastful confession that one of his killers made to me in 2002, when I was Newsweeks Jerusalem bureau chief. That man was Jihad Jaara, a former Bethlehem commander of the Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades, the armed group linked to the political party Fatah. Jaara called himself a freedom fighter battling the enemies of the Palestinian people. Israel considered him a prolific killer, responsible for the murders of Israeli settlers, soldiers and accused Palestinian collaborators. Under ordinary circumstances, Jaara would have been a prime target for assassination or arrest by the Israel Defense Forces. But Jaara has been living in exile for seven years, guarded by police, in a secret location on the outskirts of Dublin, protected by a multilateral agreement made to end the 39-day siege of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem in the spring of 2002. For several years, U.S. investigators pursued legal avenues to get Jaara, gathering evidence against him around the world. They first approached me in 2005, and now they were reaching out again. |
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Africa North |
ŽHizbullah cell posed as Aksa BrigadesŽ |
2009-04-22 |
![]() On Sunday, the London-based paper said that among the detainees were two Arab Israeli residents of the Sinai and five Muslim Brotherhood members. The two Israeli Arabs, Nimr Fahmi and Nasser Abu Omar, have admitted to providing information to Mansour and to another Hizbullah leader, Muhammad Qablan, on five Egyptian towns that border Israel, the paper said. The suspects were tasked with acquiring information about the villages, such as the number of medical units, residents, schools, entrances and exits, and on places in southern Sinai from where one could infiltrate Israeli. Meanwhile, according to a report in Sunday's pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat, Egyptian state security prosecutors have requested the harshest penalty, which includes the possibility of a death sentence, for the man accused of leading the terror cell that plotted attacks in the country. The main suspect, whose real name is Muhammad Yousef Mansour but is known as Sami Shehab, is accused of joining "a clandestine and illegal group that aimed to overthrow the regime, threaten public peace and violate laws, using terrorism as the means to achieve these goals," the London-based paper said. Egyptian officials have accused Hizbullah of organizing a 49-member cell that plotted attacks against Israeli and Egyptian targets. About half of the members are believed to have been arrested so far. Shehab, a Lebanese citizen, has also been accused of espionage for a foreign organization, Hizbullah, and supplying prohibited information without authorization, receiving military and material aid from a foreign entity illegally, and possessing weapons and explosives "in order to terrorize the citizens and commit crimes," the paper said. Prosecutors have asked for the harshest possible punishment for Mansour under Egyptian law, "the death sentence or life imprisonment if terrorism is the means used to achieve or carry out goals called by for a particular group." Mansour's lawyer, Muntasser al-Ziyat, however, argued that his clients' interrogations should be declared invalid since they occurred during the night, with each session lasting more than 10 hours, and were conducted without taking into account his client's mental or physical state. Ziyat told the paper that the confessions were coerced from Mansour, "who was detained for more than five months in an illegal detention center." Security sources also told A-Sharq al-Awsat, in a report published on Sunday, that Hizbullah intelligence had conducted geographic and social surveys of a number of Egyptian villages on the Israeli border. On Thursday, an Egyptian newspaper reported that two Palestinian Fatah members accused of belonging to the Hizbullah cell planned to carry out a major suicide attack in Tel Aviv. They were arrested a few weeks ago and are being questioned by prosecutors, according to the independent daily Al-Masry Al-Youm. Meanwhile, an Egyptian lawyer representing the ruling party has filed a lawsuit demanding that Hizbullah's Al-Manar satellite TV station stop transmitting on the Nilesat satellite frequencies, A-Sharq Al-Awsat reported on Sunday. The lawsuit also asks that Al-Manar's license to transmit be canceled in light of the Hizbullah cell that was recently discovered in Egypt. "The Al-Manar satellite channel is the tongue of Hizbullah, which began recently to broadcast false news about Egypt, describing her as an agent and as taking care of the Jewish interest and seeking to achieve the Zionist agenda, which is an insult for the government of the state, its president and her people," the lawsuit stated. The TV station also caused confusion among neighboring peoples and created chaos between different sects, according to the lawsuit. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
'Ramle woman aided Gaza terrorists' |
2008-11-17 |
Somaiya Abu Ghanem, a 21-year-old resident of Ramle, was indicted Monday in the Petah Tikva District Court for contact with a foreign agent, the Prime Minister's Office announced. The Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), in cooperation with the Israel Police, arrested her on December 28, the statement said. According to the indictment, in September 2008, Ghanem was contacted by Gaza-based Aksa Martyrs Brigades terrorists, who sought her assistance in kidnapping an Israeli. Ghanem allegedly expressed her willingness to aid the terrorists. Our loyal citizens whose rights should be respected at all costs. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | ||
PA Man Sentenced to Death for Fighting Terrorism | ||
2008-11-13 | ||
A 24-year-old Palestinian Authority Arab man was sentenced to death on Wednesday for helping Israel fight terrorism, PA media outlets reported. The sentence will not be carried out until it is approved by PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas.
The man was then hired by the PA police and began working as a naval officer. He allegedly informed on two terrorists associated with Fatah's Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades to Israeli forces. The two were assassinated by IDF soldiers in 2002. PA police say the man confessed to the allegations. Many PA prisoners who have "confessed" have later reported that their confessions were given under duress, and several human rights groups have expressed concern over the frequent use of torture by PA officers to obtain confessions.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |
Hamas-Fatah fight spreads to upper lips in mustache war | |
2008-07-31 | |
![]() Hamas resorted to this form of punishment in the past after arresting senior Fatah representatives in the Gaza Strip, the officials said.
The latest victim of the mustache-shaving policy is Nafez al-Namnam, a top Fatah operative in the Strip. Namnam, 51, is one of the commanders of Fatah's armed wing, the Aksa Martyrs Brigades, in Gaza City. He and his son Rami were arrested by Hamas policemen shortly after the mysterious explosion that killed five Hamas men on the beach in Gaza City last Friday. The father and son were among more than 150 Fatah members who were rounded up by Hamas in the aftermath of the bombing. Namnam wore an unusually large mustache for more than 30 years. But while in prison, his Hamas interrogators shaved it off before finally releasing him. | |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Suicide Bomber Attacks Gaza Crossing |
2008-05-22 |
A Palestinian suicide bomber detonated a truck packed with explosives early Thursday just short of the Erez crossing on the Gaza-Israel border, Islamic Jihad and the Aksa Martyrs Brigades>Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades, a group loosely affiliated with President Mahmoud Abbass Fatah movement, claimed responsibility for the attack, the latest of several against the Gaza border crossings in recent weeks. Islamic Jihad identified the bomber as Ibrahim Nasser, 23, of Jabaliya in northern Gaza, and said the truck had contained hundreds of pounds of explosives. An Israeli military spokeswoman said that two other |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Aksa Brigades claims shooting that wounded Israeli near Hebron |
2008-03-06 |
A 30-year-old Israeli was moderately to seriously wounded and a Palestinian killed Wednesday evening in a shooting attack in the West Bank village of Idna, near Hebron. Earlier reports had indicated that the shooting was not terror-related, and that the man had been caught in the cross-fire when members of two local clans clashed. However, it later appeared that the man, who had entered the Area B village to conduct business with a local man, had in fact been targeted. Israel Radio reported that the Israeli was sitting in his car with Muhammad Nufal, 40, when terrorists opened fire at them from a passing car. Nufal was killed, but the Israeli, who sustained a wound to his stomach, drove himself to the nearby Tarkumiya checkpoint. Volunteers from Hazolah Judea Samaria evacuated him to Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem. Some two hours after the incident, the Fatah-affiliated Aksa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the shooting. The Palestinian news agency Ma'an said the Aksa Brigades issued a statement in which it said that the "business deal" had been a trap. The report was unconfirmed by security officials. |
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