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Curfew In Gaza
Set By Palestinians

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Following the
first major incident of Palestin-
ian-on-Palestinian violence since
self-rule went into effect in mid-
May, Palestinian police imposed
a curfew on the Rafah refugee
camp in the southern Gaza Strip.
Palestinian security forces im-
posed the curfew to quell rioting
that erupted after a member of
the police force shot dead a local
youth.
The rioting erupted as Pales-
tine Liberation Organization
Chairman Yassir Arafat returned
to Gaza after meeting with PLO
members in Tunis who are op-
posed to the self-rule accord he
signed with Israel.
The fatal incident occurred
night when undercover police
spotted a group of youths they
thought were harassing young
women.
When the youths resisted ar-
rest, Moussa Abu Samhadana,
the commander of the police pa-
trol, opened fire, killing 17-year-
old Salah Shayer and wounding
another youth, Jalal Kishteh, 21,
in the leg. The young women
turned out to be relatives of the
youths, who had just attended a
wedding with them.
Relatives of Shayer and
Kishteh vowed revenge, and an
armed group went to a section of

the Rafah refugee camp to try to
attack members of Mr.
Samhadana's family. The group
reportedly fired shots and at-
tempted to kidnap a member of
the policeman's family.
When police arrived on the
scene, there was an exchange of
gunfire that left another five peo-
ple wounded.
At the Tunis meeting, mean-
while, members of Al Fatah, the
mainstream group of the PLO,
reportedly said that the Pales-
tinian charter would not be
amended until Israel recognized
the right of the Palestinians to
establish a state of their own.
Prior to last September's sign-
ing of the declaration of princi-
ples that paved the way for
autonomy in Gaza and the Jeri-
cho enclave in the West Bank,
Mr. Arafat had sent Prime Min-
ister Yitzhak Rabin a letter vow-
ing that the charter would be
amended to revoke passages that
call for the destruction of Israel.
Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres said that the PLO would
succeed only in damaging its own
reputation if it refused to abide
by agreements already reached
Chief PLO negotiator Nabil
Sha'ath denied that any new pre-
conditions had been set for chang-
ing the PLO charter.

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