Palestinian police thwarted
an attack Sunday on a security commander, the second ally of President Mahmoud
Abbas targeted in two days as the rivalry between his moderate Fatah Party and
the Hamas militant group threatened to explode.
A member of the new
security forces of the Hamas-led Palestinian government, left, patrols as
militants from the Fatah movement Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigade march as they
prepare to share patrolling with the new security forces of the Hamas-led
Palestinian government in Gaza City. Sunday, May 21. 2006. Palestinian
police thwarted an assassination attempt Sunday against a top security
commander - the second ally of President Mahmoud Abbas targeted in two
days - as the rivalry between Fatah and Hamas threatened to explode in the
streets of Gaza. [AP] |
Abbas called on both sides to do everything possible to avoid violence and
said he would open talks with Hamas later this week to end the dangerous power
struggle.
"Civil war is the red line that nobody dares cross, no matter which side they
are on," Abbas told reporters at the World Economic Forum in the Egyptian Red
Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik.
Abbas met Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni there, the first high-level
talks between Israelis and Palestinians since Hamas beat Fatah in January
parliamentary elections.
Since the Hamas Cabinet took power in March, tensions have risen as Abbas and
the militant group vie for power. Abbas was elected separately last year.
In an effort to consolidate his control over the Fatah-dominated security
forces, Abbas installed close ally Rashid Abu Shbak as the commander of the
three branches that fall under the Hamas-controlled Interior Ministry.
On Sunday, security forces discovered a 154-pound bomb planted along a route
used by Shbak's motorcade, and security officials said it was intended to
assassinate him. The explosives were found as police conducted their daily
inspection of Shbak's route before he heads to work, officials said.
The discovery came a day after Abbas' intelligence chief was seriously
wounded when a bomb filled with metal pellets ripped through an elevator shaft
in his Gaza City headquarters.
Fatah officials hinted they believed Hamas was behind both incidents but
stopped short of making an open accusation.
"There is a clear conspiracy aimed to target Fatah leaders and the security
chief in the Gaza Strip with suspicious objects. What happened today near Abu
Shbak's house and yesterday with the intelligence services is proof of this,"
Fatah spokesman Tawfiq Abu Khoussa said.
After the bomb was discovered, hundreds of Fatah activists took to the
streets in Gaza City, expressing support for the security forces and
volunteering their services. The Fatah-dominated Preventive Security agency also
stepped up patrols in Gaza City and restricted access to its headquarters.
With no direct control of any security branch, Hamas formed its own
3,000-strong security force and sent it into Gaza's streets last week despite
Abbas' veto.
Fatah officials have demanded the new black-clad force be disbanded, and
about 1,000 Fatah supporters rallied against it in the southern Gaza town of
Rafah on Sunday. Gunmen, some of them masked, fired rifles in the air as an
activist in a car shouted through a loudspeaker, "No, to the black militia!"
Hamas forces left the streets before the Fatah march.
Abbas appealed to Livni to restore regular contacts between Israelis and
Palestinians. Israel has refused to deal with the new Palestinian government as
long as Hamas does not recognize Israel and renounce violence.
During their 45-minute meeting, Livni assured Abbas that Israel remained
committed to the internationally backed "road map" peace plan. They also
discussed plans for Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to meet soon.
"It was a very good meeting, a very important meeting and the first of many,"
Livni said.
Even as Livni reached out to Abbas, she appealed to the international
community to remain firm in its rejection of Hamas.
"It is a terrorist government, on the other hand we want to help the
Palestinian people and not to punish them. ... This was part of the discussion,"
Livni said.
A Western economic boycott of the Hamas-led government has crushed the
Palestinian economy and led to fears of a humanitarian crisis.
Israel's Cabinet on Sunday approved the release of $11 million in frozen
Palestinian funds to buy desperately needed medical supplies for the
Palestinians. Olmert said the aid would be given directly to Palestinian
hospitals to ensure the money is not diverted to militants.
Abbas wants Israel to conduct peace talks through him, bypassing Hamas. But
Olmert played down that possibility in an interview with CNN broadcast Sunday.
"Abbas doesn't have even the power to take charge of his own government,"
Olmert told "Late Edition" ahead of his Sunday visit to Washington. "So how can
he represent that government in the most crucial, complex and sensitive
negotiations, about which there are so many divisions within the Palestinian
community?"
Also Sunday, Israel's Defense Ministry approved expanding the boundaries of
four Jewish settlements, a practice the United States has opposed previously.
Olmert has said he will draw Israel's borders, unilaterally if necessary, by
2010, dismantling many West Bank settlements and incorporating the largest
settlement blocs into Israel. Three of the settlements slated for expansion lie
within areas Olmert hopes to annex.