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Reports out of Lebanon said Samir Suweidan, a Lebanese citizen and PFLP li- aison officer with Hezbollah forces in Lebanon, was killed last week by an Israeli force north of the border security zone in southern Lebanon. According to initial re- ports, Mr. Suweidan was killed, together with his wife, their 11-year-old daughter and another man, when their private car was ambushed in a tobacco field near the fami- ly home in Yatar village, just beyond the northern border of the security zone. Later reports from Beirut said that Mr. Suweidan him- self had not been killed in the attack, but had been serious- ly wounded and hospitalized in Sidon. The daily Ma'ariv news- paper quoted a senior Israeli military source as saying that Mr. Suweidan was "the sort of terrorist who has been in our sights for a long time, and he deserves to have been wiped out, whoever did it." Conflicting reports de- scribed the attack near Yatar as an infantry ambush as- sisted by helicopter, an as- sault by helicopter- born. commandos or rockets fired at Suweidan's car from heli- copters. Others reports suggested that the operation was in- tended as a kidnapping of Mr. Suweidan. According to this version, the attack team, hav- ing failed to capture him, called in helicopter gunships to destroy Mr. Suweidan's car as he left his village. PFLP and Hezbollah guer- rillas are held responsible for a number of terrorist assaults against Israelis, including a series of Katyusha rocket at- tacks against the western Galilee last year, in which a 5-year-old girl was killed at Moshav Granot. The Israeli army's com- mander of the northern front, Maj. Gen. Yitzhak Mordechai, said over the weekend that terrorists may be expected to intensify attacks on the eve of Israel's Independence Day and the scheduled resumption of peace talks in Washington. He pointed out that the sit- uation in Lebanon has changed dramatically, be- cause terrorists no longer op- erate as "semi- armies" from identifiable bases that can be attacked relatively easily. Instead, anti-Israeli ter- rorists now hide among the civilian population in towns and villages, in mosques and markets, making them hard- er targets to identify and hit. Questions Arise On Gun Use Jerusalem (JTA) — A Jerusalem man who shot and killed an Arab car thief who he thought was armed, has been released on bail. The weekend incident has prompted calls for clearer government guidelines about when Israeli civilians are allowed to fire their per- sonal weapons, an issue that was hotly debated last mon- th during a wave of Palestin- ian attacks on Jews. The civilian in this latest shooting works as a security guard and told police he opened fire during a pursuit of Rad Mohammed Sha'aban, 18, of the West Bank city of Ramallah, who had broken into a car and was fleeing the scene with two other Arab youths. He said Mr. Sha'aban turned at one point and ap- peared ready to use a weapon, prompting him to fire a single fatal shot to Mr. Sha'aban's head. Police said no weapon was found near the site of the shooting. The Justice Ministry has come under criticism for fail- ing to clarify what the regulations are for civilian use of guns at a time when police have called on Israelis to carry their weapons in an effort to combat terrorist at- tacks. The government recently relaxed the shooting rules for the military, saying soldiers could fire at any armed Palestinian, even if the situation was not life- endangering. However, Jerusalem's new police chief, Yehuda Wilk, said that it is illegal for civilians to use a licensed weapon during a theft when no danger is posed to human life.