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Ten Mile Road (between Southfield & Evergreen) Southfield, MI 48075 (313) 352-1080 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6 Thursday til 7 News Two Israelis Slain Near Ramallah Jerusalem (JTA) — A machine-gun attack on two Israelis 10 miles from Jerusalem has prompted renewed attacks on the government of Prime Min- ister Yitzhak Rabin by members of the Likud and settlers' groups. The settlers, who oppose the Palestinian self-rule agreement signed by Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in September, launched renewed demon- strations Wednesday and unveiled plans to double the number of settlements, a move designed to thwart the accord. Last week, near the West Bank town of Ramallah, two Israeli men who were driv- ing home to central Israel from a settlement were shot and killed. Gunmen in a passing car sprayed their vehicle with machine gun fire. The terrorists scattered leaflets claiming the Islamic fundamentalist Hamas movement was responsible for the attack, which they said was in retaliation for the recent killings of Pales- tinians by Israelis. In Damascus, the Dem- ocratic Front for the Libera- tion of Palestine, another group opposed to the accord, also claimed responsibility for the attack. In the Knesset, where debate on the budget was interrupted by the news of the attack, opposition reac- tion was harsh. Likud Knesset member Ron Nachman, who is also the mayor of the settlement of Ariel, laid the blame squarely on the government. "They are responsible for all the killings which take place now and will take place in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip," he told Israel Television. The government's policy "is encouraging the Arabs to kill more and more Jews," Mr. Nachman said. Police Minister Moshe Shahal said Hamas and other Arab rejectionist groups are "sabotaging the peace process by launching acts of terror." But, he said, "We are deal- ing with them." Meanwhile, a settlers' group calling itself "Zu Art- zeinu," or "This is our land," announced it will break ground for 130 new set- tlements in the territories — which would double the number of settlements — to try to destroy the peace pro- cess. At a press conference, the leaders said the plans for Pa- lestinian autonomy and the Israeli military withdrawal from the territories threaten the existence of the entire state of Israel. "The recent spate of horri- fying attacks and brutal murders only highlights the ineffectiveness of the cur- rent peace negotiations," they said. "With the settlements we are saying to the world that this is our land, it belongs to Moshe Shahal: Dealing with saboteurs. us and we're going to come and go as we please, whenever we want,. wherever we want, as we see fit," said Shmuel Sackett, a spokesman for the group. Each of the new set-i tlements will be named after a victim of Arab terrorism, he said. Mr. Sackett said he got the idea for the settlement pro- ject after hearing Foreign Minister Shimon Peres refer to the settlers as an obstacle to peace. "This is a way to break the peace process," he said, ad- ding that doubling the number of settlements "is the way to double (the government's) problems and bring the peace process to a complete halt." Zu Artzeinu, a few weeks old, has collected $400,000, mostly from outside Israel. It is separate from another set- tlers' organization, the Council for Jewish Set- tlements in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, Mi. Sackett said. 0