Israel freezes Gaza agreement, demands better security border (AP) Updated: 2005-12-10 13:34
Israel has threatened to restrict trade across its frontier with Gaza if the
Palestinians fail to immediately address its security concerns at the newly
opened border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.
The restrictions, if carried out, would further choke Gaza's already shaky
economy and damage hopes for renewed cooperation between Israel and the
Palestinians following Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip in September.
The threat was made Friday at a meeting between Israeli officials and
international mediators. The Associated Press obtained notes of the session.
Early Saturday, an Israeli naval boat patrolling the Gaza coast shot and
killed one Palestinian in the town of Rafah near the Egyptian border,
Palestinian officials said. There was no immediate comment from Israel.
Palestinian medical officials identified the slain man as Nazen Farhat, 27. A
second man who was with Farhat was missing, the officials said.
Israel has complained in recent days that the Palestinians were violating a
U.S.-brokered agreement by not providing instant information on people crossing
the border from Egypt into Gaza. As a result, Israel said last week, up to 15
militants, including the brother of Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar, were allowed in.
The Rafah terminal opened November 26 under the supervision of European
monitors, giving Palestinians control of a border for the first time.
U.S. officials told a separate meeting of the so-called Quartet of
international mediators Friday that the Palestinians were complying with the
Rafah agreement and that any delay in relaying information was the result of
technological problems that American experts were trying to resolve, according
to notes of that meeting also obtained by the AP.
Meanwhile, the Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal said Friday that the militant
group would not renew its truce with Israel when it expires at the end of the
year. The truce, brokered in February, sharply reduced violence between Israel
and the Palestinians.
Mashaal said Israel had failed to honor it.
"I say enough to the truce," he told more than 1,000 supporters in a
Palestinian refugee camp outside the Syrian capital of Damascus.
The Palestinian Authority said Mashaal's statement appeared to be an attempt
to sabotage Palestinian parliamentary elections scheduled for January 25, in
which Hamas is challenging Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah Party.
In addition to the agreement over Rafah, the deal reached last month with the
assistance of U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also called for a bus
link between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to begin running by December 15
and for a large increase in the cargo traffic allowed to pass through the Karni
terminal between Gaza and Israel by the end of the year.
Israel said Friday it was freezing implementation of the entire agreement
until its problems with the Rafah crossing were addressed.
Israel's threat to begin treating its frontier with Gaza as an international
border starting Sunday would require even more stringent checks at the crossings
and could mean Gaza's removal from a customs union with the West Bank and
Israel.
About 9,000 Gazans have permits to cross through the Erez terminal every day
to work in Israel, and the Karni cargo terminal is the major outlet for the
export of Gaza's goods.
The chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat condemned the Israeli threat,
saying the Palestinians were working to address all issues at Rafah as quickly
as possible with the help of the European monitors.
"The Rafah terminal has been functioning for two weeks only, and anybody with
a sane mind should not expect the border between Germany and France," he said,
adding that the Europeans and not Israel should be the judges of Palestinian
compliance with the agreement.
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