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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Haniyah signs relief deal with Libya to support 1,000 Gazan families
2010-01-10
[Ma'an] De facto Prmie Minister Ismail Haniyah and a Libyan relief delegation signed on Thursday an agreement whereby 1,000 Libyan families will support 1,000 Palestinian families affected by Israel's war last winter, sponsored by the Gaza Ministry of Social Affairs.

"It is not strange that Libyan people should help and stand by Palestinians because both nations are like brothers and have real partnership. Palestinians are still suffering from the blockade but they will be released from it with the help of the Libyan people," said Haniyah.

The de facto prime minister's comments followed a visit on Thursday with the Libyan delegation of the International Organization for Peace to the Rayan family, who erected a tent on the ruins of their home in northern Gaza, demolished by Israeli soldiers during Operation Cast Lead. The family's father, Sheikh Nizar Rayan, was killed during Israel's military offensive.

The Libyan delegation was received by a number of Hamas officials and heads of Gaza municipalities, in addition to numerous Palestinians from northern Gaza.

The son of Sheikh Nizar Rayan welcomed the attendees and expressed his gratitude to the delegation. "We are proud of all Arabs who lend a hand and support Palestinians living under the Israeli seige," he said.

The Medal of Bravery was offered to the head of the Libyan delegation, Khaled Al-Hamidy, by Haniyah for their efforts to break the siege imposed on Gaza.

Al-Hamidy assured those present that Arab and Islamic nations do, indeed, support Gaza families and "will help them to face the blockade. Israel's practices won't oppose people's steadfastness and strength."
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gazans brace for Israeli ground invasion as death toll from air attacks reaches 430
2009-01-03
Israeli warplanes killed three young brothers and demolished a mosque in Gaza on Friday as Hamas vowed to avenge the deadly weeklong offensive against the impoverished enclave. A missile fired by an Israeli jet slammed into a house in southern Gaza, killing three boys, aged from seven to 10. It was one of more than 40 fresh raids carried out in the overcrowded enclave on Friday.

Since Israel unleashed its air and sea campaign, at least 430 Palestinians have been killed, including 65 children, and 2,250 others wounded, according to Gaza medics. The United Nations has estimated that at least one quarter of all Palestinians killed were civilians.

The bombardment has destroyed dozens of houses and raised heightened fears over the enclave where most of the 1.5 million residents depend on foreign aid.

"The protection of civilians, the fabric of life, the future of the peace talks and of the regional peace process has been trapped between the irresponsibility of the Hamas attacks and the excessiveness of the Israeli response," Robert Serry, UN envoy for the Middle East, told reporters in Occupied Jerusalem.
Robert pro'ly never leaves 'occupied' Jerusalem, so he's not had the experience of having mortar shells and missiles launched at him.
Also on Friday, thousands of Hamas supporters attended the funeral of Nizar Rayan - a firebrand terrorist leader who was killed with his four wives and 11 of his children a day earlier.

Hamas representatives vowed to avenge the death of its most senior official to be killed since the assassination of then-party leader Abdel-Aziz al-Rantissi in 2004. "I call on the resistance to continue pounding Jewish settlements and cities," said Sheikh Abdel-Rahman al-Jamal. "We will remain on the path of jihad."
"We shall have Dire Revenge™!"
A mosque in the northern town of Jabaliya that the Israeli military claimed was a "terror hub" used to stockpile weapons was among the latest targets hit in Israeli raids. Long queues formed outside bakeries and other stores, which only open during the rare hours when electricity is available. The UN emergency food program has begun distributing bread to families caught up in an "appalling" humanitarian situation in Gaza, the agency said Friday.

"The current situation in Gaza is appalling, and many basic food items are no longer available," the World Food Program (WFP) representative in the Occupied Palestinian territories, Christine van Nieuwenhuyse, said in a statement.

The Rome-based agency appealed for $9 million in emergency funds "to meet foreseen additional food needs" as the conflict raged unabated.
We gave at the office ...
"As an emergency response to alleviate the suffering of families living close to areas affected by conflict," the WFP began distributing bread to some 15,000 first-time recipients in Beit Hanun, northern Gaza, Van Nieuwenhuyse said. "This area ... is one of the poorest and most heavily affected by the recent conflict," she added.

Israeli air raids in the Gaza Strip have hampered humanitarian efforts targeting 265,000 people, the statement said. "The scarcity of wheat has meant that the majority of mills and bakeries have stopped working in Gaza, and there is an acute shortage of bread, the staple food," it added.

Max Gaylard, the UN humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, also weighed in on the crisis. "There is a critical emergency in the Gaza Strip right now ... By any definition this is a humanitarian crisis and more," he said.

"Schools are closed, the population is staying home, Gaza is experiencing a food crisis ... Hospitals and clinics are absolutely overwhelmed," he added. "There probably is an air strike every 20 minutes on average, probably intensifying at night," Gaylard said, adding that rockets fired at Israel by Gaza militants "are indiscriminate and expanding in range."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
West Bank Hamas leaders distance themselves from Gaza activists
2007-11-01
Two Hamas leaders in the West Bank on Wednesday distanced themselves from a Gaza counterpart who bragged that the group would eventually take over the West Bank.

Hamas seized control of Gaza by force in June, defeating the security forces loyal to moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. In response, Abbas ordered a clampdown on Hamas in the West Bank, arresting hundreds of activists, closing Hamas-linked charities and issuing an anti-money laundering decree meant to dry up donations to the group.

Hamas leaders in the West Bank have acknowledged that the group has been weakened by the campaign, and have said the movement decided not to confront Abbas' security services. However, earlier this week, a Hamas leader in Gaza, Nizar Rayan, told a rally of several thousand people that the group would one day pray in Abbas' West Bank headquarters, just as it had done in Gaza. Rayan also predicted that Abbas would be toppled. His remarks have infuriated Abbas' aides.

On Wednesday, two Hamas leaders in the West Bank, Faraj Rumaneh and Hussein Abu Quaik, called a news conference and distanced themselves from Rayan. Rumaneh said he wanted to express his "discomfort" with the statements. "We think they contradict Hamas policy, which calls for dialogue and national unity and reducing difference," he said.

Wednesday's statements appeared designed to help ease pressure on Hamas in the West Bank. Abbas has said he woud only resume contacts with the group if it apologized.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas takes over Abbas compound
2007-06-15
Hamas forces late Thursday moved into the last Fatah stronghold in Gaza City, the compound of offices of Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, witnesses and Hamas officials said. Hamas spokesman Abu Obeida said there was no fighting at the site, because Fatah officers had left earlier in the evening. Hamas forces overran the main Fatah security force headquarters on Thursday, taking control of virtually all of the Gaza Strip. Abbas was in the West Bank city of Ramallah at the time.

Meanwhile, a Hamas militant was killed by Fatah gunmen in the West Bank, Hamas officials said early Friday, the first such killing in the West Bank after weeks of violence in Gaza. Earlier, three of the PA's most important symbols in the Gaza Strip fell into the hands of Hamas after hundreds of PA security officers surrendered or fled to the West Bank. The southern town of Rafah also fell into the hands of Hamas.

"This is a real coup against the Palestinian Authority," said Nabil Amr, a top advisor to Abbas.
The latest Hamas victories in the Gaza Strip shocked many Fatah leaders here. "This is a real coup against the Palestinian Authority," said Nabil Amr, a top advisor to Abbas.

Hamas militiamen on Thursday night issued an ultimatum to policemen in the main headquarters of the PA security forces in Gaza City to surrender or face death. The headquarters, known as the Saraya, is located in the center of the city and houses hundreds of policemen belonging to the PA National Security Force. By 11:00 p.m. Thursday night Hamas forces had captured the stronghold. Hamas leaders said they were planning to hold Friday prayers inside the compound after "liberating" it from Abbas's loyalists. "With God's will, we will all pray in the Saraya," declared Nizar Rayan, a prominent Hamas official.
"We call on Abbas's army of prostitutes to surrender or else they will be executed in public."
"We call on Abbas's army of prostitutes to surrender or else they will be executed in public."

Earlier, Hamas occupied the headquarters of the Preventative Security Service and General Intelligence in Gaza City, and dozens of security officers were seen leaving the compound half naked and with their hands behind their heads. The pictures, broadcast on Hamas's Al-Aksa TV station, were reminiscent of situations where PA policemen had surrendered to the IDF in the West Bank. Eyewitnesses reported that some of the officers who were dragged out of the Preventative Security headquarters in the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood were later executed gang-style by masked Hamas militiamen.

The Preventative Security Service was established by former Gaza security Chief Muhammad Dahlan immediately after the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993. For many years, the Fatah-controlled force was known as Hamas's most-feared enemy. Shortly after capturing the headquarters of the force, Hamas gunmen launched a major offensive against the building of the General Intelligence in the Sudaniyeh neighbourhood in the city. Within minutes, all those inside emerged with their hands in the air.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
More Trucefire™ in the offing (as it were)
2007-02-03
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Fatah fighters stormed a Hamas-affiliated university on Friday, setting buildings on fire and dealing a sharp blow to Hamas’ prestige as a new round of heavy fighting erupted between the two factions throughout the Gaza Strip. Fifteen people, including four children, were killed.

With a total of 22 killed and 245 wounded since Thursday afternoon, Gazans huddled in their homes to escape the crossfire. Hospital officials said were running out of blood to treat the wounded.
"Better open up a vein in Mahmoud, we need more O-positive!"
On Friday afternoon, leaders of Hamas and Fatah said they had agreed in principle to a new cease-fire, but needed more ammo meetings to work out the details of a pullback of forces, who were battling in the streets with mortar shells, rockets and heavy guns.
All that ammo expended and so little in the way of deaders ...
The deal was announced after a meeting at the Egyptian embassy. “We, the leaders of the two groups, agreed with God’s help on a cease-fire,” said Nizar Rayan, a regional Hamas leader, after the meeting.
I'm not sure Allan (PTUI) had a whole lot to do with this. Then again, maybe he did.
“The measures that will be taken on the ground will be discussed in the next few hours.” A Fatah spokesman, Abdel Hakim Awad, confirmed agreement was reached in principle.

An earlier truce unravelled after just two hours days. Previous rounds of talks have ended in failure and often led to new waves of bloodshed.
Which is why they'll try again!
In another effort to end the fighting, Abbas was to travel Tuesday to Saudi Arabia for talks with Hamas’ supreme leader, Khaled Mashaal, on forming a national unity government, said Jamal Shobaki, Palestinian ambassador to Saudi Arabia.
Yeah, get the Saoodis involved, they can fix anything.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
It's Back! And better then ever! Trucefire™!!
2007-02-02
AFP: 2/2/07, 14:40. Somebody put it on the stopwatch.
GAZA CITY (AFP) - Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas and exiled Hamas political supremo Khaled Meshaal declared a ceasefire between their feuding factions in the Gaza Strip after internecine violence killed 25 people in just 24 hours.
Oh, wait a minute...
Shortly after the ceasefire was announced, unknown gunmen opened fire on the motorcade of the Egyptian envoy to the Gaza Strip, who has been at the heart of mediation efforts between Abbas's Fatah and the ruling Hamas faction. There were no injuries in the incident which cast doubts on the chances of the ceasefire, which came three days after the declaration of another truce.
Nah, c'mon guys. Give it a chance. This could be the one...
"President Mahmud Abbas and Hamas political chief Khaled Meshaal held a phone conversation this evening and agreed to make an effort to end the fighting," presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina told AFP.
Howda we evah get this far...
The two leaders also agreed to meet in the Muslim holy city of Mecca next Tuesday on the initiative of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, he added.
Oh. Mecca. That should solve everything.
Nizar Rayan, a Hamas official in the Gaza Strip, confirmed that "Abbas and Meshaal reached an agreement between Fatah and Hamas on an immediate ceasefire."
Peace in our lunchtime. At least they can maybe put the fires out.
Black smoke billowed into the sky from Gaza's Islamic University on Friday after the Hamas bastion was stormed overnight by Abbas's presidential guard and gunfire and mortar attacks erupted across the territory, also spreading to the West Bank. Masked fighters from Hamas and Fatah roamed the largely deserted streets to the rattle of gunfire as representatives of the rival parties met in Gaza City. The presidency blamed Hamas for the violence amid increasing international pressure on the factions to resolve their differences and negotiate a power-sharing agreement.

Fatah, moderate and secular, and Hamas, radical and Islamist, have tried for months to form a national unity government™ acceptable to Western donors in the hope of ending a crippling aid freeze. Hamas has steadfastly rejected Western demands that it renounce violence and recognise Israel and past peace deals.
Should we set the over/under?
Can't -- not enough time.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Human shield forces suspension of IAF airstrike
2006-11-19
The IDF said on Saturday night that it was suspending an airstike on the Gaza home of a Popular Resistance Committees commander after hundreds of Palestinians formed a human shield around the building. The Palestinians flocked to the home of Mohammedweil Baroud in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya after he received a warning from the IDF late Saturday giving him 30 minutes to leave the house.

Barhoud heads a cell responsible for firing Kassam rockets at Israel. The incident was the first time Palestinians have tried to prevent an airstrike. The crowd chanted anti-Israel and anti-American slogans, and people said they were prepared to give their lives to protect the home. "Yes to martyrdom, no to surrender," the crowd chanted.

"We came here to protect this fighter, to protect his house and to prove that we are capable of defeating this Zionist policy," said Nizar Rayan, a local Hamas leader who joined the protest.
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Fatah blames Hamas for Gaza blast
2005-09-24
The Fatah faction of Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas has blamed the resistance group Hamas for the deadly blast at a military parade in Gaza that killed at least 19 people and wounded 80 others. "The Fatah Central Committee holds the Hamas movement fully responsible for the victims of the military parade (that was held) among civilians," the committee said in a statement.
... apparently with live ammunition. Normally, when you go to a parade, they just polish up the guns and such and leave the ammunition and explosives back in garrison.
Hamas earlier said the explosion at its rally in the northern Gaza refugee camp of Jabaliya was caused by an Israeli airstrike.
"Yeah! I seen it, I tell yez!"
Israel denied involvement in the blast, the first deadly incident in the territory since it completed its Gaza pullout.
"You ain't seen nuttin'. You gotta quit drinkin' that stuff. You'll go blind!"
Fatah's Central Committee slammed Hamas for holding a rally in the densely populated camp, where thousands watched the parade procession attended by dozens of fighters, armed with rifles and other weapons.
Brilliant, wasn't it?
The massive blast on Friday ripped through the Jabaliya refugee camp as throngs of people celebrated Israel's recent withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, just hours after Israeli troops shot dead three Palestinians in the West Bank.
"Hurrah! Hurrah! [KABOOM!]"
Medical sources said 19 people were killed with more than 80 wounded. Among the casualties were children and resistance fighters.
And no doubt some child resistance fighters...
Among those hurt, 20 were in serious or critical condition, Muawiya Hassanein, head of the Palestinian emergency services in the Gaza Strip, told AFP. Palestinian security sources put the death toll at 19, but there was no immediate confirmation from medics.
"I'd put the death toll at 20. How about you, Mahmoud?"
"19. This one's still moving."
Accusations from a Hamas spokesman that the explosion was caused by rockets fired from an Israeli drone were categorically denied by the Israeli military.
"It was a rocket! I seen it!"
"Oh, shuddup."
"Help! Help! The Zionists are oppressing me!"
The jeep was ferrying men from the Islamist movement's armed wing to the open space earmarked for the festivities, when it exploded, sending mangled body parts of fighters, children and bystanders flying. The explosion occurred just as a main leader of Hamas, Ismail Haniya, was to address the swell of activists and supporters.
No word on whether he's one of the 19 or 20 deaders...
The crowd panicked and tried to escape as others tried to provide first aid before the ambulances arrived. The jeep was partially destroyed and a plume of white smoke spluttered out of its burnt, bloodied wreckage.
I love al-Jizzle's characteristically descriptive prose...
"There was smoke all over, and then we saw people in pieces, but we couldn't make out what really happened," said Hazem Abu Rashad, 18.
Brilliant. No doubt it's only my extensive experience in combat that would have made me think it was an explosion right away. Or maybe he didn't hear the "boom."
Witnesses said many children were among the dead and wounded. Hamas said six of its fighters were among those killed, including Jihad Shaleal, the head of the military wing in Jebaliya.
Goodbye, Jihad. Give our warmest regards to Himmler...
The Palestinian interior ministry and witnesses said the blast appeared to have been caused by Hamas explosives inside the car. "There is absolutely no excuse to parade weapons in the streets," Palestinian National Security Adviser Jibril Rajoub said on Friday. "They (resistance groups) are merely trying to express their power and their capabilities. I would hope Palestinian society will soon be rid of all of these images."
He means guys with guns pretending to be soldiers...
Abu Rashad, who was just metres from the explosion, said three fighters with two homemade rockets were in the truck's bed. Three or four other fighters, who are extremely popular with children, rode inside as teenagers thronged the vehicle, he said.
"Guys! Look! Krazed killers!"
"Neat!"
"Nifty!"
"Kewl!"
"Hey, kid don't touch that... [click]... Awshit... [KABOOM!]"
The Palestinian Interior Ministry issued a statement calling on Hamas "to shoulder its responsibility for these ... explosions instead of making accusations against others".
"Grow the hell up, why don'tcha?"
If an accident, the explosion would be only the latest in a string of deadly mishaps.
Yeah, we've been following the red wire-green wire thing with a certain amount of interest for the past few years now...
Six people were killed earlier this month in Gaza City when a Hamas weapons warehouse exploded. Hamas claimed it was an Israeli attack, but an investigation by Palestinian security officials said the blast was an accident caused by the fighters.
"Hey, Ahmed! We got an ash try in here?"
"An ash tray? For what? This is the powder magazine... awshit... [KABOOM!]"
During an Islamic Jihad rally at the abandoned settlement of Netzarim last week, a fighter died after accidentally shooting himself in the head.
"Hey, y'all! Watch what happens when I do this!... [BANG!]... Ow. Rosebud!"
After the blast on Friday, seven or eight fighters stood in the back of another pickup truck as it drove through the streets of Gaza, using their feet to stop a half dozen rockets from bouncing around in the bed.
Indescribably brilliant.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri told AFP "an Israeli drone fired several rockets at a convoy of cars participating in the parade, creating a large number of martyrs and injured. This is an abominable Israeli crime."
"It couldn't possibly have been our own stoopidity that dunnit! It hadda be them! I know it was! I heard 'em laughin' after the explosion!"
Speaking to Aljazeera, Hamas representative in Beirut Osama Hamdan said tens of Palestinian have seen with their own eyes the Israeli missiles falling down, and expressed dismay over the official statements issued by the Palestinian Authority which attributed the matter to an explosion resulting from "internal error" just minutes after the incident.
"Yeah! We seen it!"
Hassan Yousof, another Hamas leader, also expressed surprise as to how the Palestinian Authority rushed to adopt the Israeli version and reject the testimonies of tens of Palestinians who saw the missiles coming from the Israeli spy planes. "The Israeli missiles have targeted leaders of Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades and political leaders in Hamas," he said. A Hamas spokesman said the rockets and Qassam missiles exhibited during the military parade were actually "plastic models" as can be seen by anyone close enough or by zooming a camera on any of the missiles. Hamas leader Nizar Rayan exhibited an electric device picked from the debris which he said was proof of an Israeli missile attack.
"Hey! What is that thing?"
"It's... ummm... a thing on a wire."
Link


Israel-Palestine
Hamas has a parade, grimaces ferociously in Gaza
2005-09-17
In a sign of the new ease of travel, leaders from Egypt's banned but tolerated Muslim Brotherhood movement watched Friday as hundreds of armed militants from Hamas paraded through the ruins of a former Jewish settlement. Nizar Rayan, a Hamas leader, urged a huge crowd of supporters to welcome the Brotherhood visitors from Egypt, as more than a thousand Hamas militants marched, brandishing M-16s and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. A masked Al-Qassam leader threatened Israel with fresh attacks unless it withdrew from all occupied Palestinian territory, not just the Gaza Strip. "We tell our criminal enemies: leave our land before our army comes to you," he said.
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