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Hamas Continues Resistance Against Israel

Rockets fly after Palestinian militant faction leader killed in Israeli air strike


RAFAH, Gaza Strip, Jun. 9, 2006
By IBRAHIM BARZAK Associated Press Writer
(AP)


(AP) Palestinians fired rockets into Israel Friday and vowed to avenge Israel's assassination of the Hamas government's top security chief in an attack that threatened to ignite large-scale violence between the two sides.

The security chief, Jamal Abu Samhadana, was a key player in Palestinian rocket attacks against Israel and a close ally of the Hamas militants who now govern the Palestinian Authority and have refused to renounce their commitment to Israel's destruction.

Hours after his death Thursday night, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip fired two rockets into Israel, hitting a building in the southern town of Sderot, but causing no casualties, the military said. No one claimed responsibility.

Tens of thousands of Palestinians flocked to a Gaza Strip stadium for Abu Samhadana's funeral Friday, some firing in the air and calling for blood.

No mosque in teeming Rafah refugee camp where Abu Samhadana lived could accommodate the many thousands expected to attend the funeral prayers, a so a makeshift mosque was set up in the stadium.

Hundreds of gunmen escorted Abu Samhadana's body from the morgue to his house, and through the streets of Rafah on the way to the stadium. They fired thousands of bullets in the air, chanting, "God is great" and "revenge, revenge."

"All options are open for the resistance groups to deliver a message to the enemy that must equal the magnitude of Abu Samhadana's loss," Hamas lawmaker Mushir al-Masri told Hamas Radio.

It wasn't clear whether Hamas, which suspended its suicide bombing campaign against Israel in February 2005, would take action against Israel directly or back other factions' operations, as it has done in the past.

Abu Samhadana's appointment as Hamas' top enforcer not only angered Israel but helped set the stage for recent Palestinian infighting that has killed 16 people. The conflict has raised the specter of all-out civil war between Hamas and the Fatah movement the Islamic militants unseated in January parliamentary elections.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah, who is eager to restart long-stalled peace talks with Israel, was expected on Saturday to announce a date in late July for a national referendum on establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Hamas government officials called Abu Samhadana's killing a direct assault on the Palestinian Authority, and vowed to continue its resistance against the Jewish state. Abu Samhadana's Popular Resistance Committees faction vowed revenge.

"God willing, our retaliation shall come," blared a loudspeaker on a car carrying Abu Sharif, a top PRC commander, as it toured Gaza streets shortly after Israel's airstrike.

"It will not be by statements, but by rockets toward Sderot and all the Zionist community. It will be by self-sacrificing martyrs who will blow up themselves in every corner."

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said Friday that security officials were aware of threats of revenge and were taking general precautions. He did not elaborate.

The Israeli military said it struck a PRC training camp in the southern Gaza town of Rafah because militants there were planning a large-scale attack on Israel. It would not confirm or deny that Abu Samhadana, the No. 2 man on Israel's wanted list, had been the target.

Abu Samhadana, 43, was an explosives expert and a suspect in the fatal 2003 bombing of a U.S. convoy in the Gaza Strip. He said Israel targeted him five years ago in an explosion that left his right arm burned and mangled.

He and other militants had been about to enter the training camp in the former Jewish settlement of Rafiah Yam when the four missiles struck, killing him and three other militants, and wounding 10.

Palestinian factions, including Fatah, condemned his killing, and said it would only fuel attacks on Israel.

Ghazi Hamad, a government spokesman, said Israel's targeting of a key government figure raised the likelihood of "dangerous consequences and developments."

Since Hamas was elected to power in January, it has not been directly involved in attacks against Israel, but it does back other factions' operations. Hamas is thought to help finance the PRC, and an estimated 500 people belong simultaneously to both groups.

Over the past week, Hamas members have cooperated with the smaller group in firing rockets at Israel, though Israel has said Hamas leaders did not dispatch them.

Abu Samhadana had moved stealthily, switching cars and hideouts. A few days before his death, he told The Associated Press in a back alley interview that the U.S. government and its people would "pay a dear price" for leading bruising economic sanctions against the Palestinian Authority.

The U.S. and other Western countries imposed the sanctions because of Hamas' refusal to disarm militants and recognize Israel.

"We are happy when any American soldier is killed anywhere in the world, because the American Army is an aggressor against all the people in the world, particularly the Arab and Muslim worlds," he said. "The American people are known to be peaceful, so they are asked to move to bring down this terrorist government in Washington."

He said he had taken security measures against an Israeli attack, adding with bravado, "They don't catch me. I hunt them."

Abu Samhadana graduated from a military school in communist East Germany in 1988. He was loyal to Yasser Arafat for many years, but was later expelled from Arafat's group Fatah.

He formed the PRC with militants from various factions after the latest Palestinian uprising broke out in 2000.


MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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