http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite? 
cid=1153292011238&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

New IDF tactic: The phone call
Associated Press, THE JERUSALEM POST    Jul. 27, 2006

It was a phone call Ibrahim Mahmoud says he'll never forget.

The woman on the other end, speaking in Hebrew-accented Arabic,  
accused the appliance store owner of being a member of Hamas and  
informed him the IDF would bomb his house. Hours later, after he had  
already moved 20 relatives out of the four-story building, she called  
back to tell him she had made a mistake.

"Be safe," she said and hung up, according to Mahmoud.

Dozens of other Palestinians have recently received similar phone  
calls, many of them on target, in a new tactic the army said is meant  
to reduce civilian casualties in its monthlong offensive in Gaza.  
Palestinian officials dismissed the army's claim that the phone calls  
are meant to reduce deaths.

The military is also dropping leaflets from aircraft, warning people  
to stay away from terrorists. The army has also taken over Hamas  
radio frequencies for short periods of time for the same purpose.

Israel launched its offensive after a Hamas-linked group killed two  
soldiers and captured a third in a cross-border raid on June 25.  
Since then, more than 120 Palestinians have been killed. On  
Wednesday, Palestinians suffered their highest one-day casualty toll  
when the army killed 23 people, among then 16 terrorists as well as a  
mother and her two small daughters.

The army has said it regrets the civilian casualties, but accuses  
terrorists of operating from residential areas.

So this week, about 1,000 residents in the southern Gaza city of Khan  
Younis answered their phones and listened to a recorded message by  
the IDF warning them against harboring operatives or hiding weapons.

Government officials said some of the calls reached hospitals and  
government offices.

The Palestinian phone company said the numbers were apparently picked  
at random. The army said the calls are to specific homes or areas,  
but refused to say how it picked the numbers.

Hamas government spokesman Ghazi Hamad dismissed the army's claim  
that the phone calls were meant to reduce casualties, calling them a  
"criminal act" meant to drive people out of their homes, paralyze the  
government, and "demoralize" the population.

Othman Shbeir, a Palestinian security officer from Khan Younis whose  
terrorist brother was killed in an airstrike recently, initially  
dismissed as a joke the telephoned warning he had received, until  
neighbors told him that a nearby house of an Islamic Jihad activist  
had been bombed the same night.

Days later, his three-story house is empty.

"It is better if they just bring the house down," he said. "We are  
living in terror and no one can come near the house."


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~

TELECOM-CITIES
Current searchable archives (Feb. 1, 2006 to present) at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/telecom-cities@forums.nyu.edu/
Old searchble archives at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/telecom-cities@googlegroups.com/
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to