Hamas refuses to trade arrested ministers
Saturday 01 July 2006
Latest in Middle East
On Facebook
From the blogs
Why David Cameron owes unemployed single mothers an apology
How would you describe an unemployed single mother, with moderate depression, who can't afford new s...
Can we shop our way out of a recession?
The idea that a lot of shopping translates into a healthy economy is dubious. On the three prior oc...
How social networking made public vanity acceptable
When did it become acceptable to brag about oneself publicly?
‘French beer is unknown. We must change that’
Stereotypes die hard. ‘The Very Hungry Frenchman’, the BBC’s current television series following che...
Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas Palestinian Prime Minister, has emerged from days of seclusion with a defiant message suggesting the faction would not trade its newly arrested politicians for the 19-year-old Israeli corporal abducted six days ago.
As the United Nations warned that the destruction of a power plant in Israeli air raids was posing an imminent humanitarian crisis, he said of the arrests of 63 ministers and parliamentarians on Thursday: "When they kidnapped the ministers they meant to hijack the government's position, but we say no positions will be hijacked, no governments will fall."
Mr Haniyeh was speaking several hours after an Israeli air missile attack all but destroyed the Gaza offices of the Interior Ministry. As artillery barrages directed at open ground in northern Gaza continued yesterday, another missile attacked a vehicle in the city said to be containing militants.
Witnesses said that three people had been wounded by the missile which exploded next to the car. The air and artillery offensive was intended to maintain pressure on the Palestinian leadership to secure the safe release of Cpl Galid Shalit after a ground advance into the northern town of Beit Hanoun was delayed, apparently to allow more time for diplomatic efforts to free him to take their course.
Israel's air force has struck more than 30 targets in Gaza in the past 24 hours, hitting roads, bridges and the strip's only power plant. The army has also fired hundreds of artillery shells.
The UN emergency co-ordinator Jan Egeland had said earlier that a severe humanitarian crisis was only three days away mainly because of the effect of power cuts on essential pumping equipment for water and sewerage equipment.
On Thursday, Israel destroyed all six transformers at the only power station in Gaza. More than 30 targets have been attacked in a series of Israeli air strikes in the past 48 hours.
Meanwhile, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) spokesman Caspar Landolt said it was negotiating with Israel in an attempt to bring medical supplies, ambulances and food parcels into Gaza despite the sealing off of the Strip earlier in the week. Mr Landolt added: "There is also a need for fuel since the bombing of the power station."
The Israeli army was investigating a claim by Palestinian security officials that a soldier was shot and wounded in clashes in southern Gaza, where troops took over the disused Gaza International Airport on Wednesday.
While thousands of troops are massed along the Israel-Gaza border waiting for the go-ahead for a massive invasion into the crowded coastal area, the Egyptian President, Hosni Mubarak, declared that Hamas militants had signed up to a "conditional deal" to release Cpl Shalit but that Israel had not yet accepted the terms.
Israeli officials said they did not know of such an agreement. But Tzahi Hanegbi, the chairman of the Knesset foreign affairs and defence committee, said: "The Prime Minister is managing the campaign while seeing all the balances, including the diplomatic one.
"He needs to see the big picture, and the big picture is that there is a meaning to sometimes waiting a half a day, or a day. You need to exhaust all options."
Mr Haniyeh said that he was in contact with Arab, Muslim and European leaders to try to resolve the crisis, "but this Israeli military escalation complicates matters and makes it more difficult".
He also accused Israel of using Cpl Shalit's abduction as a pretext for launching a major offensive aimed at bringing down his government.
"This total war is proof of a premeditated plan," he said. Mohammed Nazal, a Damascus-based member of the Hamas politburo, said that Israel was not serious about negotiating Cpl Shalit's release.
In the pre-dawn attack on the Interior Ministry, the fourth-floor office of the minister Said Siyam - a leading Hamas figure - was struck by a missile.
The ground floor office of Mr Siyam's bodyguard was also destroyed, while the first, second and third floors of the buildings - where passports and identity cards are printed - were left untouched. No casualties were reported in the attack.
- 1 Pete Doherty: I was a bit unhinged
- 2 Vatican told to pay taxes as Italy tackles budget crisis
- 3 Greeks rage at erosion of sovereignty while leaders haggle over deal
- 4 Swiss to launch a space 'janitor'
- 5 Rothschild loses libel case, and reveals secret world of money and politics
- 6 Energy watchdog tells big firms: cut prices or else
- 7 Prove you gave away Chechen money, charities tell Hilary Swank
- 1 Vatican told to pay taxes as Italy tackles budget crisis
- 2 Spotify: 1 million plays, £108 return
- 3 Pete Doherty: I was a bit unhinged
- 4 Khader Adnan: The West Bank's Bobby Sands
- 5 Rothschild loses libel case, and reveals secret world of money and politics
- 6 'My 10 days at an Eton summer school was a real shock to the system'
- 7 WikiLeaks takes aim at an unlikely new victim: Unesco
- 8 Prehistoric cybermen? Sardinia's lost warriors rise from the dust
- 9 Can you master a language in a weekend?
- 10 The artist vandalising advertising with poetry
Free trial of new Independent iPad app
Get your daily dose of the best of British journalism, sponsored by American Airlines
Win a family adventure for four in the new Subaru XV
Enjoy a three-nights family adventure at Slaley Hall Resort, Northumberland courtesy to Subaru XV
Amazing restaurant offers
Three glasses of free champagne and a special menu at 46 top London restaurants.
Latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
Inside the tiny town that will topple Sarkozy
Claire Foy: Criticism, tumours and embarrassing sex scenes
Wilderness and wildlife in Australia’s Top End
48 Hours: Marrakech




Comments