8 Palestinians killed in Gaza in large strike by Israeli troops

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) _ Israeli troops, backed by tanks and helicopter gunships, killed at least eight Palestinian militants early Wednesday in one of the military's largest strikes since re-entering

Wednesday, November 1st 2006, 12:39 pm

By: News On 6


GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) _ Israeli troops, backed by tanks and helicopter gunships, killed at least eight Palestinian militants early Wednesday in one of the military's largest strikes since re-entering the Gaza Strip over the summer.

An Israeli soldier also was killed in the operation against rocket launchers in the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoun, the army said.

Despite its large-scale action in Beit Hanoun, Israel decided on Wednesday not to expand its 4-month-old offensive in Gaza, even though Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had said earlier in the week that a broader operation was in the works.

Infantry, tanks and aircraft pummeled Beit Hanoun, which the military said was a staging ground for launching 300 rockets at Israel since the beginning of the year. Two homemade rockets fired from elsewhere in Gaza fell Wednesday in the southern Israeli town of Sderot, slightly injuring one person, the army said.

At least six of the dead were militants, and the other two were not immediately identified, hospital officials said. In the latest incident, Palestinians said an Israeli aircraft fired a missile after sundown, killing one person and wounding another in Beit Hanoun. The military had no immediate comment.

Palestinian hospital officials reported 44 wounded, most of them gunmen, but including a woman and an 11-year-old boy. Dr. Jamil Suleiman, director of the Beit Hanoun hospital, said all of the facility's blood supplies had been used up.

Israel, which evacuated Gaza in September 2005, re-entered the coastal strip to try to recover a soldier captured in June by militants linked to the Palestinians' ruling Hamas party. The soldier remains in captivity, but the military has since broadened its objectives in Gaza to crush militants' rocket-launching capabilities.

Even as the offensive in Beit Hanoun continued, six homemade rockets fired from northern Gaza landed in Israel, the army said. No one was seriously injured. Hamas' military wing said it had no intention of stopping the attacks.

An army spokesman said Wednesday's operation was one of the largest in Gaza since the offensive began in late June.

Capt. Avital Leibovitz, a military spokeswoman, said Beit Hanoun was targeted because 300 rockets had been fired from the town since the beginning of the year, of a total of 800 launched from Gaza.

She described the operation in Beit Hanoun as a pinpoint strike, and not a jumping-off point for a broader military campaign in Gaza.

Israel's Security Cabinet, a group of senior ministers, on Wednesday rejected proposals for a major escalation against rocket launchers and arms smuggling operations along the Egypt-Gaza border. On Monday, Olmert had told parliament's powerful Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that the military incursion would be widened.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas issued a statement condemning Wednesday's operation and urging the international community to take action to halt the incursion.

Hamas government spokesman Ghazi Hamad accused Israel of deliberately keeping Gaza mired in chaos to give itself ``a green light in order to continue aggression against our people.'' Hamad also urged the international community ``to take a serious step to stop this crazy attack from the Israeli side.''

Israel, which is boycotting the Hamas government for refusing to disarm and recognize the Jewish state, had taken tentative steps in June to resume long-stalled peace talks with the moderate Abbas. But those efforts were cut short by the soldier's capture and the subsequent Israeli offensive.

The monthlong war between Israel and Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas dealt another setback, causing Olmert to shelve his plan to withdraw unilaterally from much of the West Bank. And the expansion of the Israeli government this week to include an ultrahawkish party made a new peace drive unlikely anytime soon.

Separately, the International Monetary Fund reported that the Palestinian Authority's income fell by 60 percent after Hamas took power in March, even as the government payroll expanded, creating an increasingly unsustainable situation.

Both Israel and Western powers cut off the flow of funds to the Hamas-led government to try to pressure the Islamic militant group to disarm and recognize the Jewish state.

Between April and September, the government took in just $500 million, down from more than $1.2 billion in the same period in 2005, the International Monetary Fund reported. Much of the drop was due to Israel's refusal to turn over an estimated $360 million in taxes it collects on behalf of the Palestinians, the report said.

Despite an international aid boycott of the Hamas-led government, some $420 million in foreign aid reached the Palestinians between April and September, more than in all of 2005. The bulk of the aid, some $300 million, came from Arab countries and bypassed Hamas.

About 80 percent of the $500 million in income in the past six months was spent on the ever-expanding government payroll and on fuel imports, leaving little for other budget items, such as welfare payments, the report said.

The report said the number of civil servants grew by 5,400 this year, to more than 142,000 in mid-June. Most of the hiring took place in the security services, and some 20,000 new recruits are currently being trained and could be added to the payroll in the future, the report said.

It now costs about $100 million a month to cover salaries for government workers, compared with about $80 million a month in mid-2005. The increase is also due to a generous across-the-board pay increase in late 2005.

``The government wage bill had already become unaffordable at the end of 2005,'' the report said. ``Underlying the current fiscal difficulties is an increasingly unsustainable fiscal situation.''
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