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Militants call off truce { August 21 2003 }

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   http://asia.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3317859

http://asia.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3317859

Israel Kills Hamas Leader, Militants Call Off Truce
Thu August 21, 2003 04:12 PM ET

By Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA (Reuters) - Israel killed a top political leader of Hamas on Thursday, prompting the militant Islamic group to ditch a shaky seven-week-old cease-fire and urge its fighters to strike back at Israel.

The killing of Ismail Abu Shanab -- considered by Palestinians and independent analysts as a moderate in the militant group -- was carried out in response to a suicide bombing in Jerusalem which killed 20 people.

The collapse of the truce following Abu Shanab's death in an Israeli helicopter missile strike in Gaza could sink a U.S.-backed "road map" peace plan aimed at ending three years of violence and creating a Palestinian state by 2005.

"We urge all our cells of fighters in Palestine to strike in every corner of the Jewish state," Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, said in a statement.

In what Hamas called initial action, it fired more than a dozen mortar bombs and makeshift Qassam rockets at Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and at the town of Sderot inside Israel, causing slight damage but no casualties, witnesses said.

Secretary of State Colin Powell urged Palestinian President Yasser Arafat to use security forces he controls to thwart attacks on Israel and warned of the risks of abandoning the road map.

"(I) call on Chairman Arafat to work with (Palestinian) Prime Minister (Mahmoud) Abbas and to make available to...Abbas those security elements that are under his control so that they can allow progress to be made on the road map -- end terror, end this violence," Powell said at the United Nations.

"At the end of the road map is a cliff that both sides will fall off."

Powell's appeal to Arafat, whom Washington has tried for months to marginalize, was an implicit acknowledgment that he retains influence and the moderate Abbas may not have enough clout to stop attacks on Israel.

Israel decided to return to tougher military action against militants after a Hamas suicide bomber blew himself up on a Jerusalem bus on Tuesday.

Hamas claimed the bus bombing as retribution for the killing of members of the group and said at the time it viewed the cease-fire as intact.

HAMAS SENIOR FIGURE

Abu Shanab died with two bodyguards when five missiles fired by helicopter gunships shattered his car as it drove through Gaza City, witnesses said. Fourteen passersby were wounded.

Abu Shanab was a senior figure in Hamas's political wing, and second only to its spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.

He had taken part in a truce dialogue with Abbas, who is committed to co-existence with Israel. Abbas called the missile attack "an ugly crime" and thousands of Palestinians marched in rallies across the Gaza Strip to protest against the killing.

A senior Hamas spokesman said the Gaza attack freed the group from its commitment to observe the unilateral truce.

"The assassination of Abu Shanab...means that the Zionist enemy has assassinated the truce," Ismail Haniyah told reporters in Gaza.

The Islamic Jihad group also renounced the cease-fire.

Israel said Abu Shanab, a high-profile, U.S.-educated engineer, was a member of Hamas's brain trust, which it accused of planning suicide bombings and strengthening a "terrorist infrastructure" during the truce militants declared on June 29.

"He was a murderer," Israeli Vice-Premier Ehud Olmert said. "I hope it's a lesson for the Hamas people. But it isn't enough, we have to get to each and every Hamas leader."

In the West Bank, Israeli tanks and troops continued a sweep for militants in Nablus after pushing into the city on Wednesday. Israel military sources said three militants were detained and soldiers found an explosives-making laboratory.



Boucher reaffirmed hamas terror list { July 29 2003 }
Hamas calls bush islams biggest enemy { August 23 2003 }
Hamas says truce finalised { June 28 2003 }
Israel agrees to tolerable level palestinian attacks { June 10 2003 }
Militants call off truce { August 21 2003 }
Militants deny truce { June 25 2003 }
Militants offer 3 month truce { June 26 2003 }
Us troops may have go after hamas { June 15 2003 }
Violence during mideast truce { July 3 2003 }

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