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    Israel presses forward with Gaza offensive
    (AP)
    Updated: 2005-09-26 19:32

    Israeli aircraft attacked suspected weapons factories throughout the Gaza Strip on Monday, pressing an offensive against Palestinian militants despite a pledge by a top Hamas leader to halt rocket fire, AP reported.


    An Israeli artillery fires a shell towards an open area near Kibbutz Nahal Oz, just outside the northern Gaza Strip, Sunday Sept. 25, 2005. Israeli aircraft blasted suspected Palestinian weapons facilities and other targets throughout the Gaza Strip on Sunday, at the launch of what the military said would be a 'prolonged' offensive against Hamas militants who bombarded Israeli towns with rockets. [AP]

    The airstrikes knocked out power to eastern Gaza City and damaged several buildings, but no injuries were reported. Israeli security officials said they would wait to see whether Palestinian attacks would in fact halt before calling off the military assault launched over the weekend.

    The fighting came ahead of a key vote Monday in Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's Likud Party on when to hold a primary election. It is widely seen as a test of Sharon's leadership.

    Sharon, under fire from party hard-liners over recent withdrawal from Gaza two weeks ago, walked out of a stormy Likud meeting Sunday night without delivering his prepared speech. A problem with the sound system prevented him from speaking. Some Likud officials said the system was sabotaged by Sharon opponents.

    Israel launched the weekend offensive following a rocket barrage from Gaza into nearby Israeli towns.

    It has carried out a series of airstrikes, killing four militants and destroying several weapons facilities, and has arrested more than 200 Palestinians. The fighting has destroyed any goodwill from the Gaza pullout and increased already intense pressure on Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas to confront militants.

    Abbas has said his forces are not strong enough to take on militants, and that he fears civil war among the many armed groups in Gaza.

    The attacks Monday struck targets around Gaza City as well as the southern towns of Rafah and Khan Younis. The army said its targets included an access road leading to a rocket-launching site in northern Gaza, and weapons-manufacturing factories and storage facilities belonging to various militant groups.

    The Gaza City airstrike destroyed a metal workshop the army said was used by Hamas to make weapons. Factory owner Ali Shaaban said it was the fourth time the workshop had been targeted. Shaaban said he produced engine parts for vehicles and generators, not weapons.

    Israel pressed ahead with its air campaign despite a call by Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar to end the group's rocket attacks. Zahar spoke at a news conference late Sunday, hours after a pinpoint Israeli airstrike killed a top commander in the Islamic Jihad militant group.

    Zahar said his Islamic militant group remained committed to a seven-month-old cease-fire and he wanted to prevent further Israeli attacks.

    "We call on our military groups to stop their operations against the enemy from the Gaza Strip," he said. Zahar also renewed a pledge to end Hamas' military-style parades celebrating the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

    The recent violence erupted following an explosion at a Hamas parade last Friday which killed 20 people in a Gaza refugee camp.

    Hamas accused Israel of setting off the explosion. But Palestinian Authority officials said investigators determined the blast was caused by the mishandling of explosives. Israel, which routinely claims responsibility for attacks on militants, denied involvement.

    Following the explosion, Hamas militants fired nearly 40 rockets into southern Israel, injuring six people and touching off the Israeli offensive. Officials said the offensive would continue until the rocket fire ends.

    Even if Hamas stops its rocket attacks, it remains unclear whether smaller militant groups would follow suit. Islamic Jihad's top leader in Gaza, Mohammed al-Hindi, said the group would no longer observe the cease-fire following Sunday's deadly airstrike.

    "There is no talk of a truce. There is only room for talk of war," al-Hindi said.

    The attack killed Islamic Jihad's top commander in southern Gaza, Mohammed Khalil, and his bodyguard as they drove on a coastal road.

    The army said Khalil was responsible for the deaths of 17 Israelis, including a shooting attack that killed a pregnant woman and her four young daughters as they drove near a Jewish settlement in May 2004.

    Although the truce has brought a sharp drop in fighting, Islamic Jihad has carried out a series of attacks since it went into effect, including three suicide bombings in Israel. The group says all of its attacks have been in response to perceived Israeli violations of the truce.

    Israel has been pushing Abbas to crack down on militant groups. The Palestinian leader refuses to use force against the militants, hoping instead to persuade them to lay down their arms peacefully.

    Mark Regev, spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said there could be no progress in peace talks until Abbas disarms the militants.

    "As long as extremists have the ability to torpedo the process of reconciliation and to launch attacks, we will be at their mercy," Regev said.

    Late Sunday, gunmen in Gaza attacked the home of the spokesman of the Palestinian Interior Ministry, the agency that oversees Palestinian security forces. The spokesman, Tawfiq Abu Khoussa, was not hurt.

    Abu Khoussa said the attack was the third attempt on his life in recent days and hinted that Hamas was behind it. Hamas has criticized Abu Khoussa and other Palestinian officials for saying negligence caused the deadly blast last week at the Hamas rally in the Jebaliya refugee camp.



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