Abbas urges Palestinian militants to follow truce (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-28 08:38
ELECTIONS COMING
Continued rocket firing could be a blow to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon as he
campaigns to win re-election for a third term on the back of the largely popular
Gaza withdrawal.
A few rockets were launched on Tuesday and one person in a northern Israeli
town was slightly hurt, the army said.
On Tuesday, Israel dropped leaflets over northern Gaza telling residents "if
you continue to stay in the area from which rockets are fired, you are putting
your life in danger."
Palestinians have condemned the threatened buffer zone as tantamount to
re-occupying parts of Gaza.
A Palestinian boy walks near destroyed houses
near the Rafah border between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip December
26, 2005. [Reuters] | Sharon has said that he
wants to pursue peacemaking with the Palestinians, but will only discuss
statehood once the militant factions are disarmed -- something the Palestinians
are meant to begin under a U.S.-backed peace "road map."
Israel has flouted its own road map promise to freeze the expansion of Jewish
settlements and Sharon has vowed to keep major blocs forever. The Palestinians
fear that could deny them the state they seek in all the West Bank and Gaza.
Abbas's dominant Fatah movement faces a strong challenge in the election from
Islamic militant group Hamas, which is seen by many Palestinians as less tainted
by corruption.
But Abbas is expected to take a step to end a damaging split within Fatah on
Wednesday by presenting a single list of candidates for the election, bringing
together the rival wings of veteran leaders and a young guard seeking a share of
power.
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