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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Egyptian mediators hammered out an agreement to end a day of clashes in Gaza that killed three and jeopardized a power-sharing agreement between rivals Hamas and Fatah.
The first incident Sunday was a shooting ambush blamed on Hamas that killed a Fatah militant commander and his bodyguard.
In a firefight that followed, Suleiman Ashi, 26, a reporter for the Hamas-affiliated Palestine Daily, was pulled from a taxi by Fatah gunmen and shot, according to the newspaper. He died later of his wounds. The Palestinian Journalists Union condemned the killing.
Ten people were wounded in clashes near the seaside compound of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in downtown Gaza. Gunmen in pickup trucks drove through the streets.
Later, a gunbattle also erupted during the funeral of the Fatah commander, Baha Abu Jarad, and three people were hurt. Fatah gunmen fired in the air during the procession, clamoring for revenge.
Before the Egyptians stepped in, Palestinian Information Minister Mustafa Barghouti pleaded with the two sides to bring their forces under control.
"Not only the future of the government but the future of all the Palestinian people will be endangered if these bloody acts continue," he warned.
In another incident, masked gunmen abducted a well-known religious scholar from Hamas as he returned from evening prayers at a local mosque in Gaza City, his family and colleagues said He was released after three hours, Hamas said.
His abduction set off a wave of kidnappings by both sides, security officials said. At least 14 people were snatched, a Hamas official said.
The new unity government, with Hamas sharing power with Fatah, took office in March. A main goal was to end months of bloody clashes between forces loyal to the two sides. But the new round of violence followed deployment of 3,000 police in Gaza from forces loyal to Abbas, over Hamas objections.
The fighting erupted as Israel's Security Cabinet debated how to respond to intensifying Palestinian rocket fire from Gaza, including five missiles launched Sunday. A government official said no decisions were made. The official was speaking on condition of anonymity because the meeting was closed.
There has been pressure on the Israeli leadership to order airstrikes against militants and an invasion of Gaza to stop the salvos.
Also Sunday, Jordan's King Abdullah called off what was to have been a rare visit to the West Bank.
The king hoped to push an Arab peace plan and show support for Abbas, a moderate and leader of Fatah. The monarch, who was to have arrived by helicopter, cited low clouds and poor visibility for the cancellation. The Abbas-Abdullah meeting is to be rescheduled in coming days, said aides to the king and Abbas.
Abdullah has warned that time is running out for reaching a peace deal based on an Arab plan that offers Arab recognition of Israel for an Israeli withdrawal from the territories captured in the 1967 Mideast War. On Tuesday, Abdullah is to talk to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Jordan about the plan.
Despite the king's push, progress on the Arab plan appears unlikely. Olmert has been weakened by scathing criticism of his handling of last summer's war against Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon, while Abbas lacks the clout to stop the fighting between Hamas gunmen and security forces loyal to him.
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