Beijing
Sept. 25 (Xinhuanet)-- Israel on Tuesday shrugged off mounting pressure and a
new UN resolution calling for an end to its siege of Yasser Arafat's
headquarters, after staging a massive raid into Gaza that left nine Palestinians
dead, wednesday's China Daily reported.
Calling the latest resolution unbalanced, Israel said it
would continue to besiege Arafat's crumbling offices in the West Bank town of
Ramallah until about 20 wanted people among the 250 men pinned down inside
surrendered.
Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer told Israeli public
radio: "We respect the United Nations, but it must realize that we will only
apply its resolution when the other side puts an end to terrorism.
"We have the duty to assure the security of our citizens,
and that is a right that no one will deprive us of."
Arafat, meanwhile, issued an appeal for the international
community to ensure Israel implements the UN Security Council resolution, saying
the Palestinian Authority was respecting its part of the deal.
"The Palestinian National Authority is conforming fully
with the resolution and calls for the international community to force Israel to
withdraw and lift the siege," he said, quoted by the official Palestinian news
agency WAFA.
Arafat said "the unanimity of the Security Council and the
US abstention are proof of the isolation of Israel's policies."
Israel's defiance of the Security Council was all the more
pronounced since its main backer Washington not only abstained from the 14-0
vote, instead of vetoing the resolution, but later made a blunt criticism of the
siege.
US President George W. Bush said the five-day-old
blockade, sparked by two suicide bombings last week, was "not helpful" for
Palestinian political and security reforms, but stopped short of calling on
Israel to withdraw.
In response, Arafat's adviser Nabil Abu Rudeina told AFP,
"We welcome the statement of Mr. Bush and we consider it in keeping with
Resolution 1435."
The resolution pointed the finger at both sides in
demanding "the complete cessation of all acts of violence, including all acts of
terror, provocation, incitement and destruction."
An Israeli official said the US reaction was to be
expected, as Washington needed to obtain the largest support possible to deal
with Iraq.
"Israel will continue the operation until its aims are
achieved," the official said. "Either Arafat leaves his headquarters or the
terrorists holed up there hand themselves over."
The Security Council said it was "gravely concerned at the
reoccupation" of Arafat's headquarters" and demanded its immediate end.
Deputy US ambassador to the UN James Cunningham said he
abstained because the resolution failed to explicitly condemn Palestinian
suicide bombings, but did not say why he refrained from vetoing it.
The spectacular bulldozing of every building around
Arafat's office, leaving the 73-year-old stranded in a few rooms, has prompted a
barrage of international criticism.
The resolution also demanded "the expeditious withdrawal
of the Israeli occupying forces from Palestinian cities towards the return to
the positions held prior to September 2000", when the Palestinian uprising broke
out.
Pope John Paul II added his weight to calls for lifting
the Ramallah siege and "the suspension of all actions which compromise the
already faint hopes for peace in the region".
British Prime Minister Tony Blair proposed a new
international conference on the Middle East peace process, stressing the need
for political reform of the Palestinian Authority and a security infrastructure
to stop attacks on Israelis.
The row over the siege blew up as Israeli troops launched
one of their biggest incursions yet in the hunt for suspected militants in the
Gaza Strip, killing nine people, six of them civilians, according to Palestinian
officials.
More than 80 armoured vehicles, backed by helicopters,
stormed into Gaza City early Tuesday, sparking gun battles which lasted five
hours.
The dead also included militants from the Islamist Hamas
group and Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a radical armed offshoot of Arafat's
mainstream Fatah movement, both responsible for killing dozens of Israelis.
The army reported no Israeli casualties and said it
achieved its "triple objective": to destroy the home of a wanted militant and
metal workshops which Israel suspects are being used to make rockets and
mortars, and to "kill armed elements who opened fire" on its troops.
Around 30,000 people turned out for the funeral of the
nine Palestinians killed, shouting for revenge against Israel and firing assault
rifles in the air.
In Ramallah, Israeli troops late Tuesday fired shots into
the air to break up a rally of around 200 Palestinians who headed toward
Arafat's besieged compound.
A refrigerator truck was also seen entering and leaving
the compound, apparently delivering food to those trapped inside, while a truck
delivered what appeared to be a generator and eight spotlights.Enditem