Reuters

Israeli Army Flattens Rows of Houses in Gaza Raid

Date: Sat, Sep 25, 2004

By Nidal al-Mughrabi

GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli forces stormed into a Palestinian refugee camp on Saturday, killing one man and flattening rows of houses in a growing cycle of violence that threatens to complicate Israel's plan to withdraw from Gaza.

The raid in the southern Gaza Strip (news - web sites) followed a mortar attack on a Jewish settlement that killed a 24-year-old woman on Friday, and the ambush killings of three Israeli soldiers guarding another settlement the day before.

A 60-year-old man was killed in an air strike at the start of the incursion into the Khan Younis camp, where U.N. relief workers said Israeli armored bulldozers then destroyed up to 35 homes. It was not immediately known how many were inhabited.

Residents shaken from their beds only had time to grab a few belongings and flee before the start of demolition, a policy that international rights groups condemn as collective punishment but Israel calls self-defense.

Witnesses said up to 100 people were left homeless in the raid, which sparked gunbattles between troops and militants.

"We ran away carrying our crying children," said Mazen Qanan, 43. "My oldest son was hit by a bullet in the stomach."

An army spokesman said troops destroyed no more than 10 abandoned structures used to provide cover for militants firing mortar bombs and makeshift rockets at settlements.

The raid came on the fasting day of Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar, with Israel shut down and its borders sealed.

WORSENING BLOODSHED

Bloodshed has worsened in the Gaza Strip ahead of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites)'s planned withdrawal of settlers and soldiers by the end of 2005.

Militants want to portray any Israeli pullout from occupied territory as fleeing under fire. But Israel's army appears determined to smash armed groups before leaving.

Sharon cannot afford escalating militant violence if he is to overcome opposition in his right-wing coalition to "disengaging" from Gaza and win a brewing showdown with settlers who vow not to budge, analysts say.

Polls show most Israelis favor Sharon's plan to uproot all 21 settlements in Gaza and four of 120 enclaves in the West Bank, but hard-liners see it as a "reward for terror."

The Khan Younis raid began under cover of darkness. Residents said a missile crashed near a mosque and medics said it killed a man of around 60 and wounded three other civilians.

The army said it had fired at militants preparing to launch a rocket into the adjacent settlement of Neve Dekalim, where a mortar from the same spot on the camp's edge killed a woman settler hours before the start of Yom Kippur.

Accusing Sharon of "incitement to murder," settler spokesman Eran Sternberg said the government's offer to pay cash advances to settlers willing to leave their homes only egged on Palestinian militants against the Jewish enclaves.

Militants fire mortars and crude rockets at settlements in Gaza almost daily, but two years had passed since the last Israeli was killed in such an attack.

Some 8,000 Israelis have settled on occupied land amid 1.3 million Palestinians in Gaza, which Israel captured along with the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war. (Additional reporting by Ori Lewis in Jerusalem)

SOURCE

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