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Written by IBRAHIM BARZAK, Associated Press Writer IBRAHIM BARZAK, Associated Press Writer
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Category: News News
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Published: 06 January 2008 06 January 2008
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Last Updated: 06 January 2008 06 January 2008
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Created: 06 January 2008 06 January 2008
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Hits: 5775 5775
Last week, along with dozens of crude homemade rockets, militants fired
a longer-range Katyusha at an Israeli city, and Israel stepped up its
retaliation.
``There is no doubt that this constitutes an intensification and
escalation in terrorism perpetrated by terrorist organizations in the
Gaza Strip,'' Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Sunday before his
Cabinet discussed the issue. He said his defense minister ``has ordered
security forces to intensify the Israeli response.''
Five Palestinians, including two civilians, were killed by Israeli
strikes in Gaza Sunday. One man was caught in crossfire, and a woman
was killed when a projectile struck a house, witnesses and a
Palestinian health official said.
Israel has been waging its military campaign in Gaza while trying to
negotiate with the moderate West Bank-based government of Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas. Leaders of the two sides plan to meet a day
before Bush arrives on Wednesday.
Immediately after Islamic Hamas militants seized control of the Gaza
Strip in June, Israel sealed its border with the territory, cutting off
the flow of all but humanitarian supplies. In October, it began to
scale back fuel shipments.
On Sunday, Kanan Obeid, chairman of Gaza's Hamas-run energy authority,
said Gaza now has only 35 percent of the power its 1.5 million
residents need.
Israel supplies all of Gaza's fuel and 60 percent of its electricity.
Even before the latest cutback, blackouts were common in the territory
because Israeli strikes have knocked out electrical transformers.
But the impending cutoffs deepened the misery of its impoverished
people as winter set in. They directed their frustration at Israel.
``The Israeli policy is not against Hamas, it is against us, the
ordinary people,'' said Hassan Akram, owner of a grocery in Gaza City.
Reem Abu Ali, 38, a teacher and mother of four, stopped by the grocery to buy candles.
``This is a crazy life,'' she said. ``My children have exams. How will they study? How are we going to warm our houses?''
Israeli government spokesman David Baker said the fuel cutbacks were
``geared to exerting pressure on the terrorists to cease'' their rocket
attacks, but he added Israel would maintain supply of vital goods and
services.
Ten human rights groups appealed to Israel's Supreme Court to stop the
measure. Sari Bashi, director of Gisha, one of the groups, said in a
statement that the fuel reductions ``mean longer and more frequent
power outages for hospitals, water wells, and other humanitarian
services, in blatant violation of international law.''