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ˇˇGAZA, April 9 (Xinhuanet) -- Palestinian militants resumed
attacks on Jewish settlements and Israeli army posts in the Gaza Strip Saturday
after Israeli soldiers killed three Palestinian teens in the southern Gaza Strip
town of Rafah.
Palestinian medics said the three
were Ashraf Musa, Kamal Ghannam, and Hassan Abu Zeid, who had been critically
wounded and died of wounds at the hospital.
There had been a complete calmness in the Gaza Strip
since 13 Palestinian factions and militant groups agreed to observe a one-year
calmness and a halt to attacks against Israel in mid-March.
However, the calmness had been broken when Israeli
soldiers stationed on the borderline between southern Gaza Strip and Egypt
opened intensive gunfire at a group of Palestinian teens.
Palestinian witnesses and medics said that the attack
occurred when the teens were playing football in the refugee camp of Rafah.
However, an Israeli army spokesman said that the
three were smugglers.
Witnesses and Palestinian security sources in Rafah
denied the allegation, saying that the three are not smugglers and they are
playing football.
Following the killing, the Islamic Resistance
Movement (Hamas) and the Islamic Jihad (Holy War) vowed to resume attacks on
Jewish settlements and Israeli army posts.
Al Qassam Brigades, Hamas' armed wing, claimed
responsibility for firing dozens of homemade rockets at Jewish settlements and
Israeli army posts in the Gaza Strip.
The group said in a leaflet that its militants fired
23 homemaderockets and mortar shells at Jewish settlements and Israeli army
posts in the Gaza Strip to avenge the killing of three Palestinians.
Sa'eed Seyam, a senior Hamas leader in Gaza, told
reporters that "this criminal act and this massacre indicate that the
Israelioccupation forces do not respect a mutual ceasefire on which we hadall
agreed."
"As long as Israel continues its aggression, it
should bear responsibility and consequences," he said.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas condemned the
killing as "a clear violation of the declared ceasefire between Israel and the
Palestinians."
"The Palestinian National Authority will never accept
the bloodshed of our people and our children. We can never accept the fact that
our children are shot," Abbas said in a statement.
The shooting incident came at a time when the
Palestinian-Israeli tension has been mounting following a decision by an Israeli
right-wing group to visit al-Aqsa Mosque in east Jerusalem,the third holiest in
Islam.
The compound where Al-Aqsa Mosque is built is called
by Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif. While, Jews call it the Temple Mount and
regard it as Judaism's holiest site.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's visit to the
mosque in September 2000 triggered a new wave of the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict.
Media reports said that thousands of right-wingers
plan to stormthe flashpoint site on Sunday. Enditem |