Tue, Nov 04, 2003 - Page 6 News List

Hamas rejects possible truce with Israel

TERMS FOR DIALOGUE The militant group said it could limit attacks to Israeli soldiers and settlers in exchange for an end to violence being committed against Palestinian civilians

REUTERS , GAZA

An Israeli soldier and an elderly Palestinian argue as the soldier prevents him from entering the Old City of the West Bank town of Hebron during curfew hours on Sunday.

PHOTO: AP

The Islamic group Hamas ruled out yesterday halting militancy in a three-year-old Palestinian revolt but said it could limit attacks to Israeli soldiers and settlers if the Jewish state stopped harming Palestinian civilians.

The declaration by Hamas chief spokesman Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi could set terms in a dialogue sought by Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Quriea on reining in violence in order to advance a US-backed "road map" envisaging peaceful statehood in the West Bank and Gaza Strip alongside Israel.

"The issue that will be possible to be addressed [with the Palestinian Authority] is continuing the resistance to the [Israeli] occupation while avoiding civilian casualties," Rantissi said at a Gaza Strip safe house.

"But if the enemy [Israel] does not accept then resistance will continue comprehensively," he said.

Israel insists on an anti-militant crackdown by the Palestinian Authority as required by the road map, a move rejected by Palestinian officials as a recipe for civil war.

"The only way forward remains unchanged. It is adopting the road map's call for the dismantling of the vast terrorist infrastructure by the Palestinian Authority and the incarceration of terrorist operatives," said Dore Gold, an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Hamas is sworn to the Jewish state's destruction and its suicide bombings prompted Israeli assassination campaigns against group leaders -- including Rantissi, who barely survived a helicopter missile strike on his car in June.

Squeezed between Israeli military sweeps and mounting Palestinian radicalism, Quriea last week invited militants to discuss a ceasefire that might lead Israel to ease its grip on the West Bank and Gaza.

Quriea has also been cobbling together a new Cabinet mindful of his predecessor, Mahmoud Abbas, who resigned in September after a unilateral suspension of attacks he secured from militants collapsed in a new round of tit-for-tat violence.

"We are trying to help Abu Ala [Quriea] to avoid the failure of Abu Mazen [Abbas] by offering to stop attacks on civilians if the enemy accepts to do the same," Rantissi said.

Like most Palestinians, Hamas considers some 250,000 Jewish settlers in the occupied territories as legitimate targets, a view rejected internationally. It says only Palestinians who themselves carry out attacks should be considered combatants.

There is a growing Israeli belief that militant groups are exploiting discontent in the occupied territories, where the uprising erupted in September 2000 after peace talks stalled, and that the Palestinian Authority must therefore be shored up.

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