West Bank Palestinians put up resistance to Israeli troops

By Mohammed Daraghmeh

Associated Press

NABLUS, West Bank — Israeli soldiers faced the toughest resistance yet in their West Bank offensive, trading round-the-clock fire with Palestinian gunmen Saturday in Nablus and Jenin. Without giving a time frame, Israel’s leader told President Bush he would expedite the nine-day offensive.

Israeli soldiers were again unable to take full control of the two cities for a third straight day of fighting.

With the gunmen firing from apartments and homes along narrow streets and alleyways, Israeli troops faced the toughest resistance yet in the offensive. The Israeli troops have taken only parts of the two cities and have not entered the nearby refugee camps, which are strongholds for the militants. One Palestinian fighter said bombs and weapons were being passed out to residents to defend the camps.

Bush repeated his call for Israel to "withdraw without delay" from towns it has occupied since launching its offensive to crush Palestinian militias after a string of suicide attacks. Speaking alongside British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush also demanded the Palestinians call "an immediate and effective cease-fire."

Israeli leader Ariel Sharon spoke with Bush by phone Saturday and told the American leader that Israel will expedite its offensive. In a brief statement, Sharon’s office said he told Bush that Israel "is conscious of the American desire to see the operation end quickly."

Sharon’s statement, however, did not say when they would withdraw troops in the operation launched March 29. He said Israel is operating in difficult conditions in areas where "there are a great deal of weapons, explosives and armed terrorists." Sharon stressed that Israel is making every effort to avoid civilian casualties and that this caution is making the operation last longer.

Bush is dispatching Secretary of State Colin Powell to the region this coming week, but the mission is already facing one potential problem: The Palestinians said Saturday they won’t talk to Powell unless he meets Arafat.

Meanwhile, Israeli troops and Palestinian security forces had a brief but intense exchange of fire Saturday night at the besieged compound of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Nabil Aburdeneh, an Arafat spokesman in the compound, said Israeli troops made moves to enter Arafat’s office, prompting the Palestinian guards in an adjacent building to open fire. The Israelis shot back at the security guards, wounding four, one of them seriously, he said. No one in Arafat’s office was hurt, he added.

The Israeli army said it came under fire from the building next to Arafat’s office and returned fire with weapons that included an anti-tank missile.

A Palestinian ambulance picked up the Palestinian security guard who was seriously hurt, but Israeli troops forced rescue workers to hand him over. The unidentified guard, who was wanted by Israel, was taken to an Israeli hospital for treatment, the army said.

Overall, 17 Palestinians and one Israeli soldier were killed Saturday, with most of the deaths in Nablus and Jenin, which are 15 miles apart in the northern part of the West Bank.

The fighting in those two cities was in sharp contrast to that in other parts of the West Bank since Israel launched its invasion last month, after a series of suicide bombing attacks that killed scores of Israelis. In most areas, Israeli tanks and armored personnel carriers faced very limited resistance and quickly took charge of the streets, with Palestinian residents remaining inside and under curfew. Still, the nine-day-old incursion has left at least 74 Palestinians and 10 Israeli soldiers dead.

In Jenin, Israeli troops on the edge of the city’s refugee camp have been battling gunmen round the clock. The Israeli forces have entered some city neighborhoods, but are facing resistance in the eastern part of the city, residents said.

Jamal Abu al-Haija, a leader of the militant Hamas movement in Jenin, said militant factions were distributing weapons — including explosive belts like those used by suicide bombers — to residents of the nearby refugee camp. "All the factions have distributed explosive belts and hand grenades to the people of the camp to defend themselves," he said.

A Palestinian woman in Jenin camp, Ilham Dosuki, blew herself up early Saturday when soldiers approached the door to her home, according to al-Haija, who said the bombing caused casualties among the soldiers.

Copyright ©2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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