Egypt Losing Patience With Gaza Chaos
38 Egyptian Security Forces Injured Trying To Stem Flow Of Palestinians Seeking Food, Supplies
-
-
Egyptian border guards stand on the wall between Gaza Strip and Egypt in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Jan. 26, 2008. Egyptian riot police and armored vehicles restricted Gaza motorists to a small border area of Egypt on Saturday, in the second attempt in two days to restore control over the chaotic frontier breached by Hamas militants. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
-
Palestinian men carry empty gasoline containers while crossing from Gaza into Rafah, Egypt, Jan. 26, 2008. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)
-
Palestinians try to lift a donkey over a border wall as they return from Egypt to Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, Jan. 26, 2008. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)
-
-
Play CBS Video Video Gaza Border Fence Blown Up Militants from Gaza used landmines to blast through a border fence allowing Palestinians to enter Egypt. The Egyptian president ordered guards to allow their purchase of food. Richard Roth reports.
-
Video Palestinians Breach Gaza Wall Palestinians have been pouring into Egypt from Gaza by the thousands, seeking food, fuel and refuge from the severe blockade imposed by Israel. Charlie D'Agata reports.
-
Photo Essay Gaza Wall Tumbles Tens of thousands of Palestinians pour into Egypt after gunmen blast down barrier.
-
Interactive Mideast Conflict Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
The border, which was initially breached by Hamas militants, remained open for a fourth day, though Egyptian security forces blocked Gazans from driving beyond the border town of Rafah itself.
Egyptian border guards were now authorized to return fire if attacked, said a security official speaking on customary condition of anonymity on the Egyptian side of Rafah. Over the past two days, 38 Egyptian security forces have been injured - some seriously - after Palestinians hurled stones and shot at them at the border, Egypt's foreign minister said.
"These provocations cause us concern and our Palestinian brothers should note that the Egyptian decision to host them and ease their suffering should not result in threats to the lives of our sons in the Egyptian forces," Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit told reporters after an emergency meeting in Cairo.
Egyptian troops have tried several times to stem the flow of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians through the breached border wall. On Friday, there were reports of Palestinians throwing stones and even shooting at the border guards and riot police.
Aboul Gheit said the decision to keep the border open stands, but Egyptian forces stopped Palestinian cars from proceeding any further into the Sinai Peninsula after Rafah, forcing thousands to walk to the coast town of El-Arish, located about 35 kilometers (21 miles) away from the border.
Armored personnel carriers blocking the roads out of Rafah turned traffic in the divided city into a honking gridlock as cars carrying Palestinians continued to drive over the border to visit relatives and buy food and livestock.
"Three days is not enough. Let us do our business before they reclose it, and nobody is doing us any favors here. We are paying a lot of money. We are not stealing anybody's property," said Amr, a middle aged Palestinian haggling over a mother camel and her daughter. He later bought the camels for $2,000 and led them back over the border.
Aboul Gheit renewed Egypt's invitation for Fatah and Hamas to resume dialogue, one day after President Hosni Mubarak offered to host talks between the leaders of the rival Palestinian factions, Fatah and Hamas.
Hamas said it would attend talks - but also urged Egypt to keep the borders open.
"We have announced our acceptance of President Mubarak's esteemed invitation without conditions and under Egyptian sponsorship," Moussa Abu Marzouk, deputy head of Hamas' political bureau, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview in Damascus.
Hamas hard-liner Sami Abu Zuhri told reporters that Hamas wants Egypt to take an "urgent and fast decision to open the crossing."
But Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas stuck to his tough conditions for resuming contacts with Gaza's Hamas rulers, dimming prospects for Egypt's proposal to have the two Palestinian opponents come to Cairo.
Abbas insists he will only talk to Hamas if it retreats from its violent June takeover of Gaza, something Hamas is unlikely to do. Abbas renewed his offer of deploying his forces at the Gaza crossings, as a way of ending the closure of Gaza by Israel and Egypt.
Hamas engineered the border breach in an attempt to pressure Egypt to negotiation new border arrangements. Both Israel and Egypt have kept Gaza largely sealed in the past two years, especially since the violent Hamas takeover of the territory in June.
Egypt faces a dilemma over how to handle the border crisis. If it acts forcefully against the Gazans, it could anger its own people, who are sympathetic to the Palestinians' plight. But if it does nothing, it risks infiltration by Islamic militants.
Earlier Saturday, dozens of riot police formed human chains to block the two passages cut through the breached border, before once again giving up and allowing the cars to cross into the Egyptian side of the divided town. Authorities were making renewed efforts, however, to keep them out of the rest of the country.
Police set up extra checkpoints on the highway between Rafah and El Arish, turning Palestinians back toward the border but allowing other nationalities to pass through. Security troops were also sporadically deployed in open desert areas, trying to halt pedestrians from circumventing the checkpoints by walking along canals and dirt roads.
Some Palestinians were also inquiring about being smuggled to Cairo, saying Egyptian drivers have offered to take them for $1,000.
The streets of Egyptian Rafah continued to be jammed Saturday with people bargaining and buying goods including water, juice, gasoline, car batteries and carpets. Merchants conducted business in various currencies including Israeli shekels, Egyptian pounds and Jordanian dinars.
Other Gazans said their shopping was done and now it was time to enjoy a vacation.
"I bought everything we need, and now it's time to for me and the kids to do some family visitation and enjoy our time in Egypt," Abdul-Rahman Abu Shameh said after crossing the border.
Israel, meanwhile, has expressed growing concern about the possible influx of Palestinian militants into areas of Egypt that border Israel. The Israeli military announced Saturday that its troops were on heightened alert along the border with Egypt, and that an Israeli road and tourism sites in the area are temporarily closed. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Abbas were to meet in Jerusalem on Sunday, and the border crisis was sure to be discussed.
Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from the territory in 2005, but it still controls access to Gaza, including Gaza's airspace and coastline. Israel also provides the fuel needed to run Gaza's only power plant. It has recently withheld that fuel, causing severe power outages.
Around a thousand Israeli protesters gathered outside the Erez crossing between Israel and Gaza on Saturday to demand Israel lift its embargo on the impoverished, crowded coastal patch. Many waved Palestinian flags and wore the traditional black-and-white checkered scarf of Palestinians. Some Israelis wore stickers showing both the blue-and-white Israeli flag and the black-red-green and white Palestinian flag.
"You are not alone," a woman shouted from a loudspeaker, directing her words at Gaza residents, who live only a few hundred meters away.
Associated Press reporter Ibrahim Barzak contributed to this report from Rafah, Gaza.
By Omar Sinan and Ibrahim Barzak
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Posted by ColonieNY at 03:06 AM : Jan 28, 2008
Don''t be so confused. Israel "conquered" Gaza in its 1967 pre-emptive war and now it owns it according to international law.
Israel likes to brag how they kicked *** during that war, oh well, the stage is all yours as they say.
But since Palestinians are such animals Israel argues international law doesn''t apply to them, or that it actually means the opposite of what it calls for.
Thus Israel has had its cake, ate it, and de.fecate it on the Palestinians.
- Reply to this comment
- Is has a barrier, and so DID EGYPT ? WHO KNEW ???
I am confused. All the coverage I have heard from the press and concerned "progressives" is the restriction of movement by Israel. ( plight of the palestineans has a nice ring to it..
Come to find out the Egytians do not want the Pales. to be going about hither and yawn either. Egypt could have had complete control of Gaza but refused. Jordan kicked them out after they tried to take over and kill the King, some years back. Then there was Leb. and now... boy trouble everywhere they go... what do the Egyptians know that our press wont tell us ? ?
How come the Is. get blamed for protecting themselves from these CRAZIES with murder on their mind, but Egypt does the same thing and not a word ??
How about a story on all those rockets falling in IS from GAZA ? EVERYday more than 50 fall with the intent of killing innocent people. Who would stand for this ?? - Reply to this comment
- Mene ,mene , tekel, upharsin .
Posted by MagicMerlin8 at 02:54 PM : Jan 27, 2008------------Precisely what is happening to our nation economically through unconstitutional ideology. Like what sevenveils advocates here at 5:57 PM. - Reply to this comment
- It is time the US initiates an American Union modeled after the European Union. Free trade, free boarders, common currency, passports not required.
- Reply to this comment
- For a bunch of impoverished unemployed and underemployed people, they sure do seem to have a large amount of money to spend. $2000 for 2 camels, and taking vacations! Sounds like luxury items.
- Reply to this comment
- invasions using armies are pretty much outdated..it is time to use unconventional methods.
Posted by lIBsLuVsUvs
Like carpet bome the entire border every other day, use lots of those bombetts (you know little bombs) and land mind the entire area. Yea that would work. Rolls eyes - Reply to this comment
- lIBsLuVsUvs,,,,,
You think McCain can secure the border ???? He claims he''s got the know how -- Yet in his home state Arizona, Mexixco''s Army is conducting maneuvers,,,, Locked & Loaded against our Border Patrol - Reply to this comment
- the best way to control the borders is TO KEEP THE LIBERALS AWAY FROM ANYTHING ABOUT THE BORDERS
- Reply to this comment
- invasions using armies are pretty much outdated..it is time to use unconventional methods.
- Reply to this comment
- libsluvsuvs,,,,, Yes, Lybia has always needed invaded, it still does,,, not much has changed there inspite of their friendship with Bush.
- Reply to this comment
- McCain has the audacity to say he know''s how to secure our borders ???? ---- LOL -- That''s like saying Bush is a great war hero
- Reply to this comment
- The USA is experiencing the same problem along the mexican border.
Posted by beehive21 at 07:38 AM : Jan 27, 2008
Isn''t it? With all those bombs going off 24/7 and the Mexicans pouring out of their border in trucks and cars and then for some estrange reason turn around and go back home. - Reply to this comment
- How do you buy "butts"?
Posted by closethippy1
Slang for cigarettes - Reply to this comment
- For the most part the Gazans bought food fuel cleaning products sheep goats motorcycles butts soda the normal stuff.
Posted by lewiston14 at 07:33 AM : Jan 27, 2008
How do you buy "butts"? - Reply to this comment
- Looks like trouble on the horizon .The USA is experiencing the same problem along the mexican border.
- Reply to this comment
- Controlled border crossings are a good idea. Checking everything and allowing anything EXCEPT weapons to cross is a good idea unless they plan on launching sheep and cans of beans and old beer bottles into Israel. One contractor bought as much cement as he could ship. Is that a threat to national security? For the most part the Gazans bought food fuel cleaning products sheep goats motorcycles butts soda the normal stuff. Even Hamas stopped a person trying to bring in guns and took them away.
- Reply to this comment
- Posted by j-whitman at 05:48 PM : Jan 26, 2008
+ report abuse
*******************
so does this mean we have your blessing to "invade" libya??? - Reply to this comment
- What if Palestinians opened a breach in Gaza-Israel border. Would Israel let the Pals in for their grocery?
-Thanks Egypt for the Humane act. - Reply to this comment
- BTW - I think exactly 38 people were injured at the last "Nerdapalooza" concert.
- Reply to this comment
- ... under Pharoah Ahmose I in 1550 BC
-LOL - Reply to this comment
How gold pays for 



