egypt, gaza escape, gaza wall, hamas, israel and palestinian conflict, israel and palestinians, palestinian, palestinian militants
egypt, gaza escape, gaza wall, hamas, israel and palestinian conflict, israel and palestinians, palestinian, palestinian militants

Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt

IBRAHIM BARZAK | January 23, 2008 04:20 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

stumbleupon :Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt   digg: Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt   reddit: Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt   del.icio.us: Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt

RAFAH, Gaza Strip — Tens of thousands of Palestinians on foot and donkey carts poured into Egypt from Gaza Wednesday after masked gunmen used land mines to blast down a seven-mile barrier dividing the border town of Rafah.

The border breach was a dramatic protest against the closure of the impoverished Palestinian territory imposed last week by Israel in response to increasing rocket attacks by Gaza militants. The closure cut off fuel and food supplies.

Jubilant men and women crossed unhindered by border controls over toppled corrugated metal along sections of the barrier, carrying goats, chickens and crates of Coca-Cola. Some brought back televisions, car tires and cigarettes and one man even bought a motorcycle. Vendors sold soft drinks and baked goods to the crowds.

They were stocking up on goods made scarce by the Israeli blockade and within hours, shops on the Egyptian side of Rafah had run out of most of their wares. The border fence had divided the Rafah into two halves, one on the Egyptian side and one in southern Gazan.

Ibrahim Abu Taha, 45, a Palestinian father of seven, was in the Egyptian section of Rafah with his two brothers and $185 in his pocket.

"We want to buy food. We want to buy rice and sugar, milk and wheat and some cheese," Abu Taha said, adding that he would also get some cheap Egyptian cigarettes. He said he could get the food in Gaza, but at three times the price.

Police from the militant Islamic group Hamas, which controls Gaza, directed the traffic. Egyptian border guards took no action and imposed no border controls on those who crossed.

"Freedom is good. We need no border after today," said unemployed 29-year-old Mohammed Abu Ghazal.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak told reporters in Cairo his border guards originally had forced the Gazans back on Tuesday when they tried to cross.

"But today, a great number of them came back because the Palestinians in Gaza are starving due to the Israeli siege," he said.

No starvation has been reported in Gaza. But many of the 1.5 million residents have faced critical shortages of electricity, fuel and other supplies over months because Gaza has been virtually sealed since Hamas seized control of the territory by force from the rival Fatah faction in June.

"I told them to let them come in and eat and buy food and then return them later as long as they were not carrying weapons," Mubarak said.

Egypt has largely kept its border with Gaza closed since the Hamas takeover amid concerns of a spillover of Hamas-style militancy into Egypt. But the government is under public pressure to help impoverished Gazans.

The collapse of the border, although likely temporary, is a boon to Hamas. It briefly eases the international blockade of Gaza and gives the Islamic militants possible leverage in demanding new border arrangements.

At the same time, it will likely raise tensions between Egypt and Israel, which fears militants and weapons will flood Gaza in growing numbers.

Hamas supreme leader Khaled Mashaal said from Syria that Hamas was willing to work out a new border arrangement with Egypt and the rival Fatah, led by moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

In Gaza, Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh called for an urgent meeting with Egypt and Fatah to work out a new shared arrangement for Gaza's border crossings and suggested that Hamas would be prepared to cede some control to the Abbas government in the West Bank.

"We don't want to be the only ones in control of these matters," Haniyeh said.

But Hamas' position was swiftly denounced by Abbas' government. Ashraf Ajrami, a Cabinet minister, said Haniyeh's call for participation was meant to sidestep Abbas' demand that Hamas return all of Gaza to his control.

"Everything Haniyeh is saying is simply to exploit this situation to win political gains. ... It is a part of the problem, not the solution," Ajrami said.

Hamas seized control of Gaza by force in June, routing pro-Fatah security forces. Israel and Egypt sealed their border crossings with the coastal territory in response, and Abbas established another government in the West Bank. The two bitter rivals have not had formal contact since.

Israel and the West imposed an aid boycott on the Palestinian government after Hamas won a parliamentary election and set up a government in early 2006. The sanctions have cut off roughly half of the estimated $1 billion in foreign aid and tax transfers from Israel. Since June, the West has been supporting Abbas and Gaza has received little direct foreign aid beyond the existing programs for Palestinian refugees there.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned he will not allow Gazans to live ordinary lives while Israelis next to Gaza are suffering from daily rocket attacks.

"We will not allow under any condition, or any situation, creation of a humanitarian crisis. We will not hit food supplies for children or medicines for the needy," he said at the annual Herzliya Conference on security

But he added: "Does anyone seriously think that our children will wet their beds at night in fear and be afraid to go out of the house and they (Gazans) will live in quiet normality?"

Israel also expressed concern that militants and weapons might be entering Gaza from Egypt amid the chaos, and said Egypt is responsible for restoring order.

Israel also is in a difficult situation. It cannot be seen as criticizing Egypt too strongly for fear of alienating one of the few Arab countries it has a peace treaty with.

"Israel has no forces in Gaza or Egypt, and the Egyptians control the border, and therefore it is the responsibility of Egypt to ensure that the border operates properly according to the signed agreements," said Arye Mekel, a spokesman for Israel's Foreign Ministry.

"We expect the Egyptians to solve the problem," he added. "Obviously we are worried about the situation. It could potentially allow anybody to enter."

In Egyptian Rafah, a market stall selling pistols and ammunition clips for Kalashnikov assault rifles had no customers Wednesday. Weapons are generally brought into Gaza through smuggling tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border.

An off-duty Hamas policeman, who only gave his first name as Abdel Rahman, said there was no need to buy weapons from Egypt.

"You can buy weapons in Gaza, guns and RPGs," he said, adding that they were easier to find than Coca-Cola.

Palestinians have broken through the Egypt border several times since Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005 and stopped patrolling the border. But none of the previous breaches approached the scale of Wednesday's destruction, which demolished two-thirds of the seven-mile partition.

The border fence was erected by Israel after the outbreak of a second Palestinian uprising in 2000.

The destruction of the wall began before dawn Wednesday, when Palestinian gunmen began using land mines to blow holes in the border partition that divides Rafah, witnesses said. There were 17 explosions in all, Hamas security officials said.

Rafah residents said Hamas-linked militants had sliced through the metal wall with blow torches a month ago _ weakening the structure so that it could fall easily when the blasts went off.

At first, Hamas and Egyptian security officers prevented people from getting through, witnesses said. But by morning thousands of Gazans had massed at the border and overwhelmed police began letting people cross.

Most Egyptian security and police were later pulled out from the immediate vicinity of the border, Egyptian security officials said.

In Washington, White House press secretary Dana Perino blamed Hamas for the chaos in Gaza and said the instability was "very troubling" for Israel.

"It is Hamas' actions of lobbing upwards of 150 rockets a day into their territory that has caused the blockade _ has caused Israel to implement the blockade," Perino said. "Hamas is not in control of the situation, they are not governing well, and the people of the _ the Palestinian people are starting to realize that they do have a choice," she added.

"The Palestinians living in Gaza are living under chaos because of Hamas, and the blame has to be placed fully at their feet."

Wednesday's chaotic scenes came almost a week after Israel imposed a tight closure on Gaza, backed by Egypt, in response to a spike in Gaza rocket attacks on Israeli border towns.

Pictures of children marching with candles and people lining up at closed bakeries in a blacked-out Gaza City evoked urgent appeals from governments, aid agencies and the U.N. for an end to the closure.

Israel maintained that Hamas was creating an artificial crisis but nonetheless eased the closure slightly on Tuesday, transferring fuel to restart Gaza's only power plant, and also sent in some cooking gas, food and medicine.

_____

Associated Press reporters Sarah El Deeb and Ashraf Sweilam contributed to this report from Gaza City and Rafah, Egypt.


 
Comments
175
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (11 pages total)
- bushmocker I'm a Fan of bushmocker 7 fans permalink

I don't see this as a left or right issue,Israel and Hamas both have grievances,but nothing can be settled if Hamas refuses to recognize Israels right to exist.There can be no peace as long as one side lobs missles indescriminately and refuses to negotiate in good faith.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 01/23/2008
- AdamWykle I'm a Fan of AdamWykle 8 fans permalink

Someone tell Dana Perino that before Hamas there was an Israeli occupation and while we do our best to render it as invisible, the illegal occupation of the Palestinians remains until today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 PM on 01/23/2008
- ptarantino I'm a Fan of ptarantino 8 fans permalink

I don't think anybody likes the idea of boxing in human beings, so good for gazaians getting their freedom of movement.

I don't know enough about this subject to add very much, but I am extremely dissapointed in Huffington Post not having the comments work, while they put this story as their lead. Every other threads comments worked except for this story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 01/23/2008

hmm so they did allow comments.Oh well,I forgot what I was going to say.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 01/23/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 62 fans permalink
photo

There are humanitarian solutions to these problems. And there are terrible, complex and serious problems riddled throughout the political landscape of this entire region.

But Israel doesn't occupy any theoretical moral high-ground here - they suck as bad as we do. We suck - they suck.

*

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 PM on 01/23/2008

Gaza belongs to Palestinians. Israelis owe them NOTHING. They want to buy stuff from Egyptians, go for it.

For the hyperventilating morons:
EGYPT, THE "MUSLIM BROTHER" CLOSED THE BORDER WITH GAZA.

What no protest against them???

The usual double standard.

Jews close the border: Criminals!

Arab Egypt closes the border: SILENCE.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 01/23/2008
- Jane22 I'm a Fan of Jane22 10 fans permalink

I am happy that no one came to kill these people who only want to live and take care of their families. There is far too much suffering and killing on a Planet that speaks of Peace, but rushes to cause pain and suffering--all for money and power.

Will someone please put down the weapons of death first. Some of us will die in our continuing quest for non-violence, but future children will be able to live. These poor people have suffered enough. Israel: Please stop hurting these people and they will stop trying to hurt you. Peace

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 PM on 01/23/2008

last time i looked israel left the gaza strip in 2005 and hamas took power .they don't accept israel or want peace everyday the sent rockets into israel proper. israel has every right to fight back they need to squash hamas

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:23 PM on 01/23/2008
- txfriend I'm a Fan of txfriend 7 fans permalink

Celebrations are abound! Cheers to the ordinary Palestinians who have suffered under barabaric super-power backed cowards!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 01/23/2008
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
photo

test

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 01/23/2008

So what will the Israel Neocons do now that Bush has shown an interest in the problem, even calling it an OCCUPATION!!!:

A) Instigate an incident with the Palestinians?

B) Invade one of the border Arab countries?

C) Reorganize their government for the next year till he is gone?

D) Assassinate the Prime Minister again?

ANSWER: A) Instigate an incident with the Palestinians?

Gaza City was plunged into darkness Sunday after Israel blocked the shipment of fuel that powers its only electrical plant in retaliation for persistent rocket attacks by Gaza militants.

The power cut sent already beleaguered Gazans to stock up on food and batteries in anticipation of dark, cold days ahead. Gaza officials warned the move would cause a health catastrophe while a U.N. agency and human rights groups condemned Israel.

“We have the choice to either cut electricity on babies in the maternity ward or heart surgery patients or stop operating rooms,” Gaza Health Ministry official Dr. Moaiya Hassanain said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 PM on 01/23/2008
- waitomo I'm a Fan of waitomo 3 fans permalink

What's the matter? Rocket launchers and RPGs are inedible? Screw the Palestinians. They wanted Hamas, they got Hamas. And so now they reap what they've sowed. Why the left excuses their terrorism is beyond me. The left does not like Jews.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 01/23/2008
- Johnz52 I'm a Fan of Johnz52 5 fans permalink
photo

When an occupying army herded a few thousand Jews into Warsaw it was called a war crime. Those who rebelled against the occupying army were labeled heroes. When Israel corrals over one million Palestinians into Gaza and systematically starves them it is called acceptable. Those who rebel against the Israeli occupiers are labeled terrorists. Collective punishment of civilians is a war crime. What is happening in Gaza today is no different than the crimes perpetrated in Poland seventy years ago. Hopefully one day we will see the Palestinians have their own viable state and those guilty of perpetuating war crimes against them tried and executed just the same as those guilty of war crimes during WWII were.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 01/23/2008
- sparkandy I'm a Fan of sparkandy 28 fans permalink
photo

What's up with 183 posts pending at this time, 4:44 pm est? Is HuffPo going to release them all at the same time, wait five minutes, then declare the post closed for comments?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 01/23/2008

this isnt a blog,this is a news story..why do you need to approve these comments?Can you be any more fascist ??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 01/23/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (11 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect