http://www.comcast.net/news/international/index.jsp?cat=INTERNATIONAL
<http://www.comcast.net/news/international/index.jsp?cat=INTERNATIONAL&fn=/2
007/05/24/671504.html> &fn=/2007/05/24/671504.html

Israelis Arrest Hamas Leaders


 Israeli troops in the West Bank arrested more than 30 senior Hamas members
early Thursday, including a Cabinet minister, legislators and mayors _
pressing forward with an offensive against the Islamic militant group.


The roundup came hours after Israeli planes struck what the military said
were money changing offices and other businesses in Gaza used to channel
funds to Hamas.

Israel has been attacking Hamas targets for more than a week in retaliation
for repeated rocket attacks from Gaza on Israeli border towns.

The Israeli army said it arrested 33 Hamas leaders in its overnight sweep.
The most prominent official taken in the roundup was Education Minister
Nasser Shaer, considered a pragmatist in the movement.

His wife, Huda, said soldiers knocked on the door of their home in the West
Bank city of Nablus and took him away. Troops also seized Shaer's computer,
she said. Israel also detained Shaer for a month last year during a similar
crackdown before a judge ordered his release.

Defense Minister Amir Peretz said that in the fight to neutralize Hamas,
arrests were preferable to bloodshed.

"Arrests are better than shooting, " he told Israeli Army Radio. "The arrest
of these Hamas leaders sends a message to the military organizations that we
demand that this firing (of rockets) stop."

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said the arrests were a blow to peace
efforts, and a spokesman for Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, of Hamas, called
for the immediate release of the detainees and called on the U.N. and
European Union to impose sanctions on Israel.

"These aggressive practices show the extent of the Israeli escalation and
arrogance in the Palestinian territories, and also show how dismissive the
Israeli government is of all customs and international laws," spokesman
Ghazi Hamad said.

Abbas, a moderate from the Fatah party, has been meeting with Haniyeh in
Gaza this week in an effort to reduce tensions with Israel.

The raid was the second major crackdown on Hamas in the past year. Israel
rounded up dozens of Hamas officials, including three Cabinet ministers,
last June after Palestinian militants tunneled into Israel from Gaza and
captured an Israeli soldier.

Some 40 Hamas lawmakers arrested last summer _ nearly one-third of the
Palestinian legislature _ are still behind bars. Despite the crackdown, the
soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, remains in captivity.

Last year's swoop paralyzed the Palestinian parliament, but detained Cabinet
ministers were quickly replaced.

Among those rounded up Thursday were former Cabinet minister Abdel Rahman
Zeidan, legislators Hamed Bitawi and Daoud Abu Ser, the mayors of the towns
of Nablus, Qalqiliya and Beita, and the head of the main Islamic charity in
Nablus, Fayad al-Arba.

Until Thursday, Israel's crackdown on Hamas had been largely focused on the
group's Gaza Strip stronghold. Israeli airstrikes have killed more than 40
Palestinians in Gaza over the past week, most of them militants.

In new violence, a Palestinian was killed Thursday by Israeli tank fire near
the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya, local hospital staff said and the
health ministry said a woman injured in an air strike last week died of her
wounds in the hospital.

The Israeli military said a tank fired shells into an area close to the
border with Israel that is regularly used by militants to fire rockets.

Visiting EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana met Abbas in Gaza and called
for Palestinians and Israelis to stop the violence..

"The rockets and the Israeli response have to stop," he said after the
meeting.

Abbas himself condemned what he called the "absurd" rocket fire and said he
was trying to persuade militant groups to stop. "They must stop so we can
reach a truce with Israel," he said.

Israeli aircraft on Wednesday demolished two money exchange shops in Gaza
City used to channel funds to Hamas militants, the military said. The army
said the shops served as a conduit for millions of dollars sent from Iran,
Syria and Lebanon.

Three people were slightly wounded in one of the attacks, medical officials
said, and four stores were damaged in another, Palestinian security
officials said. Electricity was cut off in parts of the town.

The airstrikes came as Abbas and Haniyeh were making a new push to restore a
truce with Israel.

It also was the first time the men have met since fighting between their
Hamas and Fatah movements broke out two weeks ago, killing more than 50
people. The two sides reached a truce last weekend, but tensions remain
high.

The Abbas-Haniyeh meeting ended with the two sides agreeing their factions
would meet again.

"We are working to recommit to the truce," Abbas aide Nabil Abu Rdeneh said.

A Haniyeh aide, Ahmed Yousef, said a renewed cease-fire with Israel would
have to be comprehensive and include the West Bank in addition to Gaza. The
previous truce, brokered in November, applied only to the Gaza-Israel
border, and Israel rejected repeated Palestinian demands that it also halt
arrest raids in the West Bank.

"If it is going to be for Gaza only, then no one will be able to convince
the Palestinian resistance factions to commit to that," Yousef said.

Israel, however, sees no point in extending to the West Bank a truce it says
has failed to prove itself in Gaza.

"Israel has always said that if a cease-fire is kept in Gaza we're willing
to extend it to the West Bank," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said.
"The trouble is that a cease fire in Gaza has never been kept ... It has
been a sham. The idea of extending a failure is flawed one."

 



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