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Gaza fighters turned back at Rafah
Palestinian resistance groups have accused European Union monitors of preventing three of their senior commanders from leaving the Gaza Strip and threatened to blast a path in the border to allow them to travel.
That's their usual response when they can't have their way, isn't it?
The Rafah crossing on the border between Gaza and Egypt was opened last month under a deal brokered by Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, in hope of stirring an economic revival in the coastal strip that Israel quit after 38 years of occupation. European Union supervision over the Rafah crossing was a compromise agreed upon to alleviate Israeli fears of an influx of foreign fighters and arms to the Gaza Strip.
By, that's working well, isn't it?
The chief of the Popular Resistance Committees (PRC), an umbrella group of Palestinian fighters waging a five-year-old uprising against Israel, said he had been denied permission to travel for the Muslim haj pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.
My heart bleeds... No. Wait. That's the pickled eggs...
In a statement posted on his website, the PRC leader, Jamal Abu Samhadana, quoted a Palestinian official as saying the EU monitors at Rafah had "banned" him from leaving Gaza. "He also told me those monitors could order Palestinian policemen to arrest me because I was a fugitive," said Abu Samhadana, who is high on Israel's wanted list. A PRC spokesman threatened the group's fighters would blast a path through the concrete barricades along the Gaza-Egypt border if the ban were not rescinded by the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha on 10 January.
"Aaaar! We'll blow 'em up! We got guns an' dynamite an' stuff!"
EU officials could not immediately be reached for a comment. Nazmi Mhana, the Palestinian Authority official in charge of the Rafah terminal, declined to comment.
"Hey! I got nuttin' to say! They're the ones with the guns and dynamite and stuff!"
The PRC's protest was echoed by Palestinian groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad, each of which said one of its field commanders had been barred from crossing Rafah. Hamas sources said Ahmed al-Jaabari, believed to be the second-in-command of the group's armed wing, had been turned back at Rafah by Palestinian security officers. "They banned him, citing the diplomatic pretext that they cared for his safety," the source said.
Pretty polite of them, wasn't it?
Islamic Jihad said its military commander, Khaled al-Dahdouh, had been also been blocked, and vowed to support any PRC attack on the border barricades.
"Yeah! Ain't nobuddy screws with us! Nobuddy, y'unnerstan'?"
Under the deal brokered by Rice, Israeli officials watch the Rafah crossing via videolink and can ask the EU monitors to detain any Palestinians deemed possible security threats. Israel has accused the Palestinian Authority of not passing full details on those using Rafah, a charge that it has denied. Palestinian security sources said political leaders of Hamas and Islamic Jihad had been allowed to leave Gaza through Rafah for the haj pilgrimage.
Posted by: Fred 2005-12-27
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=138392