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Members of a group called Jund Ansar
Allah surround their leader Abdel-Latif Moussa (2nd-R) as he speaks during
Friday prayers in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip August 14, 2009.
Islamist radicals from the Palestinian group called Jund Ansar Allah
defied the Hamas rulers of Gaza on Friday by declaring an "Islamic
emirate" in the territory and staging a defiant display of
arms. Photo
Gallery>>> |
GAZA, Aug. 14 (Xinhua) -- After eight-hour armed
fighting between Gaza ruling Hamas security forces and militants of a
pro-al-Qaida group in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah on Friday,16 people
were killed and 120 wounded, medics and witnesses said.
According to medics at the Abu Yousef al-Najjar
Hospital in the town, 16 people were killed and 120 wounded in fierce armed
clashes between the two sides near the Iben Taymeyah mosque in the town that
belongs to the group.
The police of the deposed Hamas government imposed a
strict curfew on the town, according to local residents, who said dozens of the
group's members fled the area and hid into underground tunnels near and under
the mosque.
The residents said they were
locked into their homes and they still heard explosions and gunshots from time
to time, believing that Hamas police and security forces are still chasing the
members of the group.
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Members of a group called Jund Ansar
Allah surround their leader Abdel-Latif Moussa (2nd L) after Friday
prayers in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, Aug. 14, 2009. Islamist
radicals from the Palestinian group called Jund Ansar Allah defied the
Hamas rulers of Gaza on Friday.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
They also said that dozens of Hamas policemen,
security officers and militants controlled the mosque and detained dozens of the
group's members held up inside, including the group's spiritual leader Sheikh
Musa, better known as Abu Noor al-Maqdisi.
Musa, leader of the extreme Islamic group, better
known as the Jihadi Salafi (a radical Sunnite group) affiliated with the
internationally-banned al-Qaida, announced earlier that his group is to
establish an Islamic emirate in Gaza.
He slammed Islamic Hamas movement for not
implementing the Sharia (Islamic Law) in the Gaza Strip, and announced before
prayers during Friday prayers at the mosque that his group is exerting efforts
to reinforce the rules of Sharia in Gaza.
Musa's fate is still unknown after his house was
blown up by Hamas security forces, according to the residents and other security
sources in Rafah.
Hamas interior ministry's spokesman Ihab al-Ghussein
told Xinhua he has no information if Sheikh Musa is dead or alive, adding "we
can't certify or deny his death or if he was detained."
Al-Ghussein fully held Musa responsible for the
clashes, and accused him for having direct ties with the leaders of the security
apparatuses of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) in the West Bank.
Meanwhile, Hamas police spokesman Islam Shahwan
announced that the police operation in Rafah is still going on and hasn't ended
yet, expecting that "it may continue until tomorrow (Saturday) morning."
Al-Ghussein has also accused the radical Sunnite
group of being activated by the Israeli security apparatuses "to strike on
Hamas," adding that Hamas had dismantled in the past such kinds of groups who
were sponsored by Israel.