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December 02, 1994 - Image 56

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-12-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE VOLVO BO.
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Four wheel anti-lock disc brakes. And Delta-Link rear suspension.

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No Israeli Interference
In Palestinian Fighting

Jerusalem (JTA) — While Pales-
tinian leaders attempted over the
weekend to calm tensions in the
wake of bloody rioting in.the
Gaza Strip, Israeli officials offered
restrained reactions, careful to
avoid any appearance of inter-
ference.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
said flatly that Israel would not
intervene in what he described
as a matter best left for the Pales-
tinians to work out for them-
selves.
"I propose we leave it to the
Palestinians to deal with their in-
ternal matters," he told Army Ra-
dio from the United States, where
he was on an official visit.
Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres echoed this view. "The cur-
rent struggle between the (Pales-
tine liberation Organization) and

fighting.
The Cabinet was also briefed
by the Israel Defense Force chief
of staff, Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak,
about a Saturday night terrorist
attack near the Israeli settlement
of Netzarim in Gaza, where an
Israeli soldier was killed — the
fourth in less than two weeks at
the site.
Lt. Gen. Barak told the minis-
ters about a demonstration by
some 300 Hamas supporters who
overtook an army checkpoint
near Netzarim and raised a
Palestinian flag after destroying
the post.
Following standing orders, the
soldiers fled the checkpoint un-
der a hail of stones thrown by the
demonstrators.
Staff Sgt. Gil Sadon, 26, of Tel
Aviv, was later killed at the site,

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A Palestinian kisses a dead friend in the morgue

AP/HEIDI LEVINE

following the clash In Gaza.

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WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

Hamas and the Islamic Jihad is
an internal Palestinian issue,' he
told Army Radio. "We must be
very cautious and not create the
impression that Israel is in-
volved."
Mr. Peres instead stressed the.
economic problems facing Gaza,
noting that pledges of financial
support from foreign donor na-
tions have failed to materialize.
As a result, he said, the Pales-
tinian leadership has been ham-
pered in its attempts to improve
the lot of the average Gazan.
At its weekly Meeting, the Cab-
inet was briefed on the violence
in Gaza, the worst outbreak of
Palestinian infighting since the
start of self-rule in May.
The violence, which left 12
Palestinians dead and about 250
injured, was sparked by clashes
between the Palestinian police
and followers of rejectionist fun-
damentalist movements who had
gathered outside Gaza City's
main mosque. Each side has
blamed the other for starting the

when a speeding car with Gaza
license plates opened fire on the
army post. It was the same post
where, on Nov. 11, a terrorist
rode up on a bicycle and explod-
ed a bomb that claimed the lives
of three other Israeli soldiers.
Lt. Gen. Barak criticized the
Palestinian police for not doing
enough to prevent the rioting at
the army post, but Economics
Minister Shimon Shetreet said
ensuring the safety of Israeli civil-
ians in Gaza was not the Pales-
tinians' responsibility.
Mr. Peres and Environment
Minister Yossi Sarid expressed
support for the IDFs decision to
order the soldiers to abandon
their post temporarily. mr. Peres,
who is acting prime minister
while Mr. Rabin is in the United
States, said the evacuation pre-
vented large-scale bloodshed.
The Likud party caucus in the
Knesset, meanwhile, said that re-
sponsibility for the events at the
Netzarim army post lies with the
Israeli government.



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