Fresh Fears Of Palestinian Civil War
Hamas demanded Tuesday that Fatah-allied security forces abandon their positions, threatening to attack those who remained in their posts.
The fierce fighting between rival Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip has left at least 18 people dead since Monday and raised fresh fears of civil war, reports CBS News correspondent Robert Berger.
Hamas-affiliated radios said Hamas fighters have already taken control of security installations in northern and central Gaza, as well as the southern town of Khan Younis. The claim could not be verified independently.
A Palestinian security official said Fatah-allied forces were still in control of key positions. However, Col. Nasser Khaldi, a commander of Fatah forces in southern Gaza, said his men are on the defensive.
Khaldi said Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of Fatah, must give orders now to fight back.
"There is a weakness of our leaders," he said. "Hamas is just taking over our positions. There are no orders. The orders must be from the president, nobody else."
In other developments:
The homes of Abbas of Fatah and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas were both attacked as the rival factions battled in Gaza City. They weren't hurt.
A rocket-propelled grenade hit Haniyeh's home Tuesday in what his Hamas movement said was an assassination attempt by Fatah, but caused no injuries. Earlier, four mortar shells hit Abbas' Gaza City compound, but caused no injuries, either.
In one incident, Hamas warned over a mosque loudspeaker that it would attack the headquarters of the Preventive Security Service in Gaza City, which is loyal to Fatah. "The warning which we have given you to surrender has ended, and we will attack this position of Zionist collaborators," the warning said.
Exasperated Egyptian mediators said the bitter rivals turned down an appeal to meet for truce talks. The bloody fighting between rival Palestinian factions also has brought despair to Palestinian officials, like negotiator Ibrahim Abu Najah.
Dozens of cease-fires have failed, Abu Najah said, because no one is listening. He said the gunmen who rule the streets don't answer to anyone. Palestinian leaders have lost control of the armed gangs, so Gaza is in chaos.
Heavy gun battles erupted in several locations, in what security officials described as a Hamas assault on positions of the Fatah-allied security forces, and four security bases were overrun by Hamas in the southern town of Khan Younis. In the West Bank, Fatah gunmen threatened to retaliate by killing Hamas leaders.
Abbas, who is in the West Bank, accused Hamas of trying to seize control of Gaza by force and appealed for a new cease-fire.
Hamas and Fatah have been sharing power in an uneasy coalition for three months, but put off the key disputes, including wrangling over control of the security forces. Most of the forces are dominated by Fatah loyalists, while Hamas has formed its own militia over the past year in addition to the thousands of gunmen at its command.
Abbas' office said in a statement that "some Hamas political and military leaders are planning to stage a coup ... thinking they will be able to control Gaza by force."
Each group used Web sites and text messages to call for the execution of the other side's military and political leaders. Both sides described the fighting, which is turning more brutal with each day, as all-out civil war. In all, more than 80 people have been killed since mid-May, most of them militants.
The head of the Egyptian mediation team, Lt. Col. Burhan Hamad, said neither side responded to his call to hold truce talks Tuesday.
"It seems they don't want to come. We must make them ashamed of themselves. They have killed all hope. They have killed the future," said Hamad, who brokered several previous short-lived cease-fires.
Hamad said both sides were about equal in firepower. "Neither can have a decisive victory," he said. "To be decisive, they need weapons that neither side has."
He said he would call civilians out into the streets to protest if the two rivals did not agree to stand down.
Islam Shahwan, a spokesman for the Hamas militia, brushed aside the latest truce efforts. "It's all talk. It's not serious," he said.
Both sides have become more and more ruthless in recent days. Two men were thrown off high-rises earlier in the week, several people have been shot from close range in field executions, and hospitals have become firing zones.
On Tuesday morning, a gun battle erupted at the European Hospital in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis. Hamas gunmen controlling the rooftop traded fire with Fatah-allied security forces posted nearby. Fifteen children attending a kindergarten in the line of fire were rushed into the main building of the hospital, funded largely by European donations.
Earlier in the day, a rocket-propelled grenade hit the home of Haniyeh in the Shati refugee camp on the outskirts of Gaza City. His son, Abdel Salam, said a grenade hit the side of the house, damaging it, while the family was inside.
A Hamas Web site described the incident as an assassination attempt. Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum accused Fatah of targeting Palestinian institutions to bring down Hamas. "They crossed all the red lines," he said of Fatah. It was the second straight day that Haniyeh's home has come under fire.
Elsewhere, a member of the Hamas military wing was kidnapped and executed by Fatah gunmen. The dead man was identified as a cousin of Abdel Aziz Rantisi, a Hamas leader Israel assassinated in 2004.
Separately, Hamas gunmen attacked the home of a senior Fatah security official with mortars and grenades, killing his 14-year-old son and three women in the house, security officials said. Other Fatah gunmen stormed the house of a Hamas lawmaker and burned it to the ground.
The fighting also spilled into the West Bank, with Palestinian security forces seizing two employees of the Hamas-linked Al Aqsa TV station in the city of Ramallah and confiscating equipment. Fatah gunmen said Hamas leaders in the West Bank, a Fatah stronghold, would be targeted if Hamas doesn't halt its attacks in Gaza.
The latest fighting disrupted final exams for university and high school students. The three Gaza universities called off final exams set for Tuesday. High schools were trying to move test centers to areas out of the range of fire, said Mohammed Abu Shkeir, the deputy minister of education.