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Abbas's govt dismantling militant groups: minister

29/12/2007 13:16

By Atef Sa’ad

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - The top Palestinian security official said on Saturday his government was dismantling militant groups, including those connected to President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction.

The pledge by Interior Minister Abdel-Razak al-Yahya came one day after Palestinian militants killed two off-duty Israeli soldiers who were hiking near the West Bank city of Hebron. Two of the militants were also killed in an ensuing gun battle.

Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed at a U.S.-sponsored peace conference last month in Annapolis, Maryland to launch negotiations with the goal of reaching a statehood agreement by the end of 2008.

But Israel has said it will not implement any agreement until the Palestinians meet their obligations under the long-stalled "road map" peace plan to rein in militants in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Hamas Islamists seized control of Gaza in June after routing Abbas’s secular Fatah forces there, but Fatah still holds sway in the West Bank.

The Palestinians assert that they are meeting their security obligations in the West Bank by launching a security clampdown in some of the largest cities.

"There is no al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades any more," Yahya told Voice of Palestine radio, referring to .....continued below

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Fatah’s largest armed group.

He said Abbas’s Western-backed government has started "working to dismantle" other militant groups, though he did not spell out how that would be accomplished.

"We wish they (other groups) will respond positively and follow al-Aqsa’s example," Yahya said.

He stopped short of threatening to deploy his forces against those who resist the security clampdown, but he said: "We will impose law and order".

Western diplomats say Abbas’s forces have taken serious steps in parts of the West Bank to impose law and order, and to crack down on Hamas militants.

But the diplomats questioned the government’s ability to disarm Fatah militants on a larger scale, noting al-Aqsa’s decentralised command and control structure.

A unit of al-Aqsa in the Gaza Strip issued a statement in the Gaza Strip accusing Yahya of being a "collaborator" who follows "American and Zionist masters".

"We will pursue Jihad and resistance until we liberate Palestine from the Zionists," the statement said.

A splinter group of al-Aqsa in Gaza -- along with the Islamic Jihad militant group -- claimed responsibility for Friday’s shooting attack near Hebron.

Palestinian Foreign and Information Minister Riyad al-Malki said on Friday in response to the shooting: "As we condemn all Israeli assassination operations ... in Gaza and West Bank, we cannot accept such operations carried out by armed groups".

Malki said the aim of the group who carried out the attack was to disrupt peace talks and the Palestinian security plan, and promised "to take harsh measures" against them.

Israel has yet to meet its own "road map" obligations to halt all settlement activity and uproot Jewish outposts built in the West Bank without government authorisation.

Page: 12next

By Atef Sa’ad

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - The top Palestinian security official said on Saturday his government was dismantling militant groups, including those connected to President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah faction.

The pledge by Interior Minister Abdel-Razak al-Yahya came one day after Palestinian militants killed two off-duty Israeli soldiers who were hiking near the West Bank city of Hebron. Two of the militants were also killed in an ensuing gun battle.

Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed at a U.S.-sponsored peace conference last month in Annapolis, Maryland to launch negotiations with the goal of reaching a statehood agreement by the end of 2008.

But Israel has said it will not implement any agreement until the Palestinians meet their obligations under the long-stalled "road map" peace plan to rein in militants in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Hamas Islamists seized control of Gaza in June after routing Abbas’s secular Fatah forces there, but Fatah still holds sway in the West Bank.

The Palestinians assert that they are meeting their security obligations in the West Bank by launching a security clampdown in some of the largest cities.

"There is no al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades any more," Yahya told Voice of Palestine radio, referring to Fatah’s largest armed group.

He said Abbas’s Western-backed government has started "working to dismantle" other militant groups, though he did not spell out how that would be accomplished.

"We wish they (other groups) will respond positively and follow al-Aqsa’s example," Yahya said.

He stopped short of threatening to deploy his forces against those who resist the security clampdown, but he said: "We will impose law and order".

Western diplomats say Abbas’s forces have taken serious steps in parts of the West Bank to impose law and order, and to crack down on Hamas militants.

But the diplomats questioned the government’s ability to disarm Fatah militants on a larger scale, noting al-Aqsa’s decentralised command and control structure.

A unit of al-Aqsa in the Gaza Strip issued a statement in the Gaza Strip accusing Yahya of being a "collaborator" who follows "American and Zionist masters".

"We will pursue Jihad and resistance until we liberate Palestine from the Zionists," the statement said.

A splinter group of al-Aqsa in Gaza -- along with the Islamic Jihad militant group -- claimed responsibility for Friday’s shooting attack near Hebron.

Palestinian Foreign and Information Minister Riyad al-Malki said on Friday in response to the shooting: "As we condemn all Israeli assassination operations ... in Gaza and West Bank, we cannot accept such operations carried out by armed groups".

Malki said the aim of the group who carried out the attack was to disrupt peace talks and the Palestinian security plan, and promised "to take harsh measures" against them.

Israel has yet to meet its own "road map" obligations to halt all settlement activity and uproot Jewish outposts built in the West Bank without government authorisation.

(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi; Writing by Adam Entous; Editing by Richard Balmforth)




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