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Israel kills two top Islamic Jihad gunmen

06/02/2006 09:47

By Nidal al-Mughrabi

GAZA (Reuters) - Israel killed the top bombmaker for Islamic Jihad and another gunman in an air raid in Gaza City on Sunday, security sources said, hours after an Israeli and three other militants died in a fresh surge of Middle East violence.

Witnesses said Israeli aircraft fired two missiles that blew up two vehicles, killing Adnan Bustan, 28, the head of Islamic Jihad’s unit that produces rockets and explosives, and Jihad al-Sawafiri, 31, who led a rocket firing squad.

An Islamic Jihad official said Bustan was the group’s most senior explosives expert and engineer.

Islamic Jihad had claimed responsibility for one of the worst recent rocket strikes from Gaza on Israel, in which three Israelis were wounded, including a baby, on Friday.

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The group was quickly joined by other militants in vows to avenge the Israeli strike. "We will burn the ground and respond everywhere," said Abu Dujana, a spokesman for Islamic Jihad.

Abu Qusai, a spokesman for the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades said: "Every Zionist, soldier and civilian, will be a target for our attacks".

Hundreds of angry supporters gathered outside a morgue where the bodies were taken and chanted: "Death to Israel, Death to America", as gunmen fired rifles into the air.

An Israeli army spokesman said "the air force attacked two vehicles in the northern Gaza Strip carrying Islamic Jihad terrorists who were responsible for projectile rocket attacks against Israel".

An Israeli security source said Bustan had also spearheaded rocket attacks by two other militant groups, the Al-Aqsa Brigades and Popular Resistance Committees.

Hours before the raid, a Palestinian stabbed to death an Israeli woman and wounded five other passengers on a minibus in central Israel, an attack that came after an Israeli helicopter gunship killed three militants in Gaza.

The bloodshed was the worst since the Islamic militant group Hamas scored a crushing victory over President Mahmoud Abbas’ long-dominant Fatah faction in a January 25 parliamentary election.

The election radically shifted the dynamic between Israel and the Palestinians. Hamas’ charter calls for Israel’s destruction.

ISRAEL RELEASES FUNDS

Under pressure from Washington, interim Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert approved the nearly $55 million (31 million pounds) transfer of Palestinian tax revenue Israel suspended pending a policy review after Hamas’ big win.

Completing the review, Olmert’s cabinet decided to transfer the sum Israel owed for January, minus a collection fee and deductions for Israeli electricity and health care services used by Palestinians, a government official said.

"Since Hamas hasn’t yet set up a government and the new parliament is not yet sworn in, every month we will take a new assessment," Olmert told ministers.

A Hamas leader said on Saturday the group hoped to form a government this month. Parliament is to convene on February 16.

The tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of the Palestinians are a main source of funding for the Authority’s budget and are used to pay 140,000 government workers.

"This is our money. This is not a favour," Palestinian Economy Minister Mazen Sonnogrot said after the decision. "I hope that such payments will continue in the future."

In Jerusalem, tens of thousands of Jewish settler supporters staged their largest protest in months.

They packed a town square to demand an official inquiry into the wounding of dozens of demonstrators trying to block the partial razing of an unauthorised West Bank enclave.

The protest underscored the growing fears of Israeli rightists over Olmert, whose centrist Kadima party is expected to win a March 28 national election.

They fear he may opt for additional unilateral moves in the absence of peace talks with Palestinians, and dismantle more West Bank settlements.

(Additional reporting by Adam Entous and Tali Caspi in Jerusalem,Mohammed Assadi in Ramallah)

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