Israel hits Palestinian ministry (AP) Updated: 2006-06-30 08:38
Anger flared across the Middle East over Israel's assault, and many Arabs
criticized their governments for not aiding the Palestinians. The Egyptian
government's top rival, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, urged Egyptians to
gather at pro-Palestinian demonstrations Friday, the Muslim Sabbath.
The request from Egypt came after Israel increased the stakes in the search
for the soldier by arresting more than one-third of the Hamas-led Palestinian
Cabinet, including the deputy prime minister, in a series of early morning raids
in the West Bank.
Israel hinted that the 64 Hamas officials were intended as bargaining chips
for Shalit, but one official said the opportunity for preventing a blowup was
slipping away.
"We are at the edge of a cliff here, and I would urge the Palestinian
leadership to release Cpl. Shalit," Regev said.
Osama Hamdan, an exiled Hamas official based in Lebanon, declined to say
whether the group would be willing to trade Shalit for its officials.
"It is premature to discuss this matter," he said. "If the Israelis want to
trade them (the Hamas politicians) for the soldier, then let them say it frankly
and then we will react."
There has been no sign of life from Shalit since his abduction Sunday. The
Popular Resistance Committees ¡ª one of the groups holding him ¡ª did not confirm
his condition in a statement Thursday, but insisted on swapping him for
Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails. Israel has rejected that demand.
The group also said it killed Eliahu Asheri, the 18-year-old West Bank
settler whose body was discovered Thursday. The militants had said they would
kill Asheri if the raid on Gaza did not stop, but an Israeli military official
said he was shot in the head shortly after he was abducted Sunday.
Government spokesman Asaf Shariv said Asheri's killers would be arrested, and
Israel would bring them to trial. "Their days as free people are numbered," he
said.
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