|
Hamas orders gunmen off streets (Reuters) Updated: 2006-04-01 19:46
GAZA - Palestinian Prime Minister and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on Saturday
ordered all gunmen and security men involved in deadly clashes in the Gaza Strip
to get off the streets.
Gunbattles between police and militants on
Friday, during which three people died, posed a major challenge for Islamist
militant group Hamas days after it took over running the Palestinian government.
Clashes broke out when members of the Popular Resistance Committees
(PRC), an umbrella group of militants that often fires rockets into Israel,
accused Palestinian security forces close to President Mahmoud Abbas of helping
Israel kill a top member of their faction in a car blast.
Israel's army
denied involvement in the explosion.
Haniyeh said his government, which
beat Abbas's Fatah in a January election and now controls tens of thousands of
security officers, had decided to remove gunmen from the streets in order to end
tension.
"What happened was dangerous and must not be repeated," Haniyeh
told reporters. "The culture that dominated the Palestinian street in past
years is a culture that needs time in order to turn into a culture that keeps
law and order and does not resort to using arms under any condition," he added.
The PRC said it had agreed to follow Haniyeh's call.
Palestinian
Preventive Security Chief Rashid Abu Shbak later met with both the incoming and
outgoing interior ministers in Gaza and said the gunmen had left the streets.
"I do not think there are gunmen anymore," he told reporters. "The
incident is over at the moment and I hope there will be no more consequences."
The lawlessness followed a general increase in violence.
A
Palestinian suicide bomber killed four Israelis in the West Bank on Thursday.
Israel has carried out repeated strikes on what it said were rocket launch sites
in Gaza, while local militants fired several rockets into the Jewish
state.
Hamas, an Islamic group sworn to Israel's destruction and which
has carried out about 60 suicide bombings against the Jewish state since 2000,
has largely avoided involvement in internal Palestinian fighting.
Although Hamas has largely respected a truce for the past year, it has
refused to give up its own weapons and renounce violence, as demanded by Israel,
the United States and other major powers.
Tension has risen between
Hamas and Fatah since the January 25 election ended decades of domination over
Palestinian politics by Abbas's movement.
One Fatah-affiliated militant
group, the Knights of the Tempest, called on the government to bring
Palestinians suspected of cooperating with Israel to justice, or they would opt
to chase them and "bring to trial" the people
themselves.
|
|
|
|