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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3294)3/13/2002 5:48:43 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Arafat aide is killed as Israelis hit Ramallah
Violence intensifies before the arrival of U.S.
peace envoy


Compiled by Our Staff From Dispatches AP, Reuters
Wednesday, March 13, 2002

International Herald Tribune

RAMALLAH An officer in Yasser Arafat's guard
and an Italian war photographer were killed
Wednesday as Israel pressed on with its biggest
offensive in decades against the Palestinians on
the eve of a U.S. peace mission.


The latest bloodshed left little room for hope that
the U.S. envoy Anthony Zinni, who was due to
arrive in Israel on Thursday, would be able to
persuade Israelis and Palestinians to end the
bloodshed after failed missions in December and
January.

"Zinni will not succeed if we do not help him,"
Israel's foreign minister, Shimon Peres, who is the
government's leading dove,
told Channel Two
television. His comments implied criticism of the
two-week-old campaign in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, now involving 20,000 troops, begun by
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon after Palestinian
attacks brought intensified calls from the right for
tougher action.

Abu Fadi, a deputy commander in the West Bank
city of Ramallah for Arafat's Force 17 elite guard,
was killed in the fighting, Palestinian security
officials said. They gave no details. The
photographer, Raffaele Ciriello, who had worked
in many of the world's hot spots, was shot six
times in the chest while covering the Israeli
takeover of Ramallah, the first foreign journalist to
die in 17 months of conflict.


Palestinian hospital officials said Ciriello, a
freelance journalist, was killed by Israeli gunfire
after tanks stormed into Ramallah on Tuesday, a
day in which 41 people were killed on both sides
in one of the bloodiest cycles of violence so far.

But the army, which tightened its grip on
Ramallah on Wednesday against the backdrop of
daily Palestinian attacks in Israel, said it did not
know the circumstances of Ciriello's death and
had opened an investigation.

"It is important to remember that there have been
exchanges of fire in Ramallah, and that this was
the reason the army closed off the area to
journalists," said Lieutenant Colonel Olivier
Rafowicz, an army spokesman.

About 150 armored vehicles, including tanks,
thrust into Ramallah and nearby refugee camps
Tuesday, tearing up roads and crushing cars in
the main Palestinian commercial and political hub
in the West Bank, witnesses said.

Hundreds of spent cartridges were scattered
around Ramallah's central square following heavy
shooting in the area overnight. Israeli tanks and
armored vehicles were stationed at schools and on
road junctions throughout the city.

Hospital officials said Israeli gunfire and shelling
wounded at least 14 Palestinians on Wednesday.
They said one person was in critical condition with
a gunshot wound to the head.

The UN secretary-general, Kofi Annan, in his
harshest criticism of Israel, urged it to stop "the
bombing of civilian areas, the assassinations, the
unnecessary use of lethal force, the demolitions
and the daily humiliation of ordinary
Palestinians."

The UN Security Council passed a U.S.-drafted
resolution referring for the first time to a
Palestinian state existing side by side with Israel.
The 14-0 vote late Tuesday, with Syria abstaining,
marked the first time the 15-nation council had
approved a resolution on the Middle East since
October 2000 and was the first recent text
touching on the region to be written by
Washington.
The U.S. ambassador to the UN,
John Negroponte, said Washington's move aimed
to give momentum to Zinni's mission, which
coincides with a trip to the region by Vice
President Dick Cheney. Zinni was scheduled to
arrive Thursday. On two previous visits, he failed
to coax the two sides toward a cease-fire, and U.S.
officials have said he carries no new solutions to
ease what has become the deadliest violence in
Israel, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank in a
generation.

Reports from Washington suggested that Zinni
might propose stationing U.S. monitors if a
cease-fire accord could be reached. But calls for
revenge here have grown louder in recent weeks,
all but drowning out pleas for restraint.

In Ramallah and the nearby refugee camp of
Amari, Israeli armored forces invaded from three
directions, firing as they went. Tanks advanced to
within 200 meters (650 feet) of the Arafat
compound just a day after Israel announced he
was free to travel in Gaza and the West Bank after
having been cooped up in Ramallah for three
months.

Israeli forces have penetrated parts of Ramallah
before, but never as deeply, or in such massive
force. Ramallah and its surrounding
neighborhoods have been a base for numerous
suicide bombers and other militants, prompting
Israeli officials to brand it a hotbed of terror.


The town was also the scene of one of the most
indelibly brutal images of the current fighting,
when two Israeli reservists were lynched by a
Palestinian mob after they made a wrong turn and
blundered into town in October 2000.

It "is the main base for terrorism," said Colonel
Gal Hirsch, the Israeli operations chief in the West
Bank. "That's why we are there." (Reuters, WP)

iht.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (3294)7/26/2002 4:08:42 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Journalist of Jenin's Despair Dies of Wound

"The two men began taking photographs, Mr. Dahla said. Both wore vests marked Press, though only Mr. Dahla's was
bulletproof. One of the armored vehicles began shooting, he said. Mr. Dahla was shot in the left shin, Mr. Abu Zahra in the
right thigh."

By JAMES BENNET with JOEL GREENBERG
July 13, 2002
The New York Times

JENIN, West Bank, July 12 - Jenin's militants and Israel's military have made this city notorious as a place of death. But to
Imad Abu Zahra, it was home, and as a journalist he struggled to express its history, its turbulent politics and its
desperation.

Today, he died of a wound he suffered on Thursday, when he made his last effort to tell the world about life here by
photographing Israeli tanks downtown.

Two other Palestinians, including a 13-year-old boy, were killed today, by Israeli gunfire in the Gaza Strip, bringing to at least
36 the number of Palestinians killed since June 20, when Israel began seizing West Bank cities in response to back-to-back
suicide bombings in Jerusalem. Another death was reported though not confirmed.

At least 17 of those killed have been unarmed civilians, said the Israeli human rights group B'tselem.

The Israeli offensive in the West Bank, which has the tacit backing of the Bush administration, has succeeded so far in
stopping suicide attacks in Israel. Cafes in Jerusalem - at least those that stayed open on the Jewish Sabbath - were
jumping tonight, after weeks of fearful silence.

The price to Palestinians has been high, with hundreds of thousands of people who Israel acknowledges are innocent virtually
prisoners in their homes, under 24-hour curfew and stringent travel restrictions.

Some have paid for the heightened military alert with their lives, including Randa al-Hindi, 45, and her 2-year-old daughter,
Noor. Returning home from a relative's wedding, they were shot dead last Saturday as their truck, in a foggy dawn, approached
Israeli Army outposts around the isolated Gaza settlement of Netzarim. The army at first denied that its troops had opened fire,
then said they had fired warning shots after spotting suspicious people.


An army investigation found that soldiers had violated the army's firing regulations. The soldiers involved will face disciplinary
hearings, an army spokesman said.

The curfew had been temporarily lifted here on Thursday when Mr. Abu Zahra, 34, was shot. The Israeli Army said today that it
was investigating.

The army said that on Thursday afternoon, two armored vehicles were moving through the downtown area when one hit a light
pole and became stuck. A crowd gathered, and Palestinians threw firebombs and then opened fire, prompting the soldiers to
fire back, the army said.

Witnesses here contradicted that account. Said Shawqi Dahla, a photographer for the official Palestinian news agency, was with
Mr. Abu Zahra when they spotted the armored vehicle, about 150 feet down Salahadin Street. "We thought it was a good
picture," he recalled from a hospital bed here.

With the curfew lifted, Palestinians were moving through the streets, Mr. Dahla said, but there had been no gunplay or other
violence.

The two men began taking photographs, Mr. Dahla said. Both wore vests marked Press, though only Mr. Dahla's was
bulletproof. One of the armored vehicles began shooting, he said. Mr. Dahla was shot in the left shin, Mr. Abu Zahra in the
right thigh.

The journalists managed to reach cover in a nearby hair salon, its gray stone door frame today still marked with Mr. Abu
Zahra's crimson handprint. No ambulance could reach them, said Mr. Dahla and Ali Samoudi, a Reuters television cameraman
who arrived within minutes. After about half an hour, a taxi carried them to Jenin Hospital, the witnesses said.

The large-caliber bullet that struck Mr. Abu Zahra had opened a grapefruit-size wound in his right thigh, destroying more than
two inches of his femoral artery, said the surgeon who operated on him, Nihal Sawalha. "It was a very big wound," she said.
"There was almost no blood in his body."

Mr. Abu Zahra's heart and breathing stopped as he arrived at the hospital, Dr. Sawalha said. She resuscitated and stabilized
him. But this morning, after two heart attacks, he died.

Mr. Abu Zahra often called some foreign journalists he met in Jenin to update them on events here, in hopes of drawing
attention to the city's plight and perhaps getting a little work. He telephoned one reporter last month to describe how Israeli
soldiers had seized his father's house for a night, searching it and using it as their headquarters to question the neighbors in
what he called "a kind of violence and humiliation."

He loved journalism, his family said, and he carried three press identification cards, including an Israeli-issued card that
expired in 1996.

He started his own newspaper that year, calling it simply Jenin. His father, Subhi Abu Zahra, a retired English teacher,
proudly displayed copies today.

Imad Abu Zahra interviewed an elderly resident about the city's heritage, and he published another story about a local artist.
But while he criticized Israel's occupation of the West Bank, he also criticized the mayor of Jenin, and for that he was jailed
and his paper shut down, his relatives and others here said.

Mr. Abu Zahra had just been awarded a fellowship to study television journalism in England,
his family said, and he planned to
leave Jenin at the end of the month.


But his relatives had no doubt that he would have returned to cover life here. "He was belonging to his city, intimately," said
his father, his voice steady but his eyes red.

Today, in the town of Deir al Balah in the central Gaza Strip, Israeli forces exchanged fire with Palestinians while arresting
wanted men, the army said. Palestinian officials said Israeli soldiers had opened fire on a police station there, killing one
policeman and Muain al-Adaini, 13.

In the West Bank, Palestinian security officials said Jamal Arrar, 37, died after he was shot by Israeli troops near Qalqilya.

Arabs' Statehood Plan

CAIRO, July 12 - The Arab states, dismayed that the United States has basically ignored their call for a specific timetable for
defusing Arab-Israeli violence, will propose a two-year plan for the establishment of a Palestinian state, senior Arab officials said
today.

The proposal will be made next week during a series of meetings that the foreign ministers of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia
plan to hold with Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and others at the United Nations and in Washington.

nytimes.com
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company