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Rampaging settlers kill teenage girl in Hebron |
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By Nazir Majally, Arab
News Staff HEBRON, West Bank, 29 July — A Palestinian girl was shot dead
yesterday as enraged Jewish settlers rampaged, guns ablaze, through this
West Bank city following the funeral of an Israeli killed by Palestinian
militants, Palestinian witnesses and hospital sources said. Nivin Musa Jamjoum, 14, was shot in the head as she stood on her
balcony near a shrine, the hospital sources said. Her brother was also
wounded, they said. At least another 11 Palestinians were injured in the
rampage, including a family of six riding a horse-drawn cart which was
rammed by settlers in a car on a bypass road, the sources said. The
family members were said to be seriously injured. Two others, one of them a man in his 20s, were suffering from gunshot
wounds, while a nine-year-old was beaten up, they said. Another
Palestinian youth was reportedly stabbed and later evacuated for medical
treatment by the Israeli army. Witnesses said the settlers also took
over a three-story Palestinian house, confining the Abu Nagiba Al-Sharbati
family to a single room, while a second Palestinian house was torched
and badly damaged. The burned house belonging to the Abu Samir Al-Sharbati
family and contained a large collection of antiques, witnesses said. The
family was evicted before the house was torched. Settlers were also shooting and throwing stones at Palestinian houses
near the Jewish enclave of Avraham Avinu after the funeral of an Israeli
soldier and resident of the area who was killed Friday in a Palestinian
ambush. The rioting came as politicians moved to restore contacts between
Israel and the Palestinian Authority officials, after an Israeli air
raid on Gaza City on July 22 killed 15 people, including a militant
leader and 13 civilians, and threatened to derail fragile talks that had
resumed last weekend. A senior Palestinian official said Israeli Finance
Minister Silvan Shalom was to meet today with his Palestinian Authority
counterpart Salam Fayad. The Palestinian leadership, meanwhile, asked the UN Security Council
yesterday to pass a binding resolution ordering Israel to withdraw its
troops to positions occupied before the outbreak of the intifada. “The
Security Council must ... pass a binding resolution for a cease-fire, a
withdrawal of Israeli forces to the lines of Sept. 28, 2000, and send
international observers” to the Palestinian territories, the
leadership said in a statement released after meeting in the West Bank
town of Ramallah. The meeting, chaired by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, called
on the “international community to adopt a firmer and more effective
position and to be totally involved in peace efforts.” It said the
observers should be under the control of the so-called diplomatic
“quartet” of the United States, European Union, Russia and the
United Nations, trying unblock the Middle East peace process. Meanwhile, Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Shara stepped up Syrian
criticism of US Middle East policy in comments published yesterday,
slamming its “biased and blind” support of Israel. “We are not
satisfied with the biased and blind (policies) of the United States in
support of Israel that attacks the Palestinians and threatens stability
in the region,” the foreign minister told the official Syrian media
from Algiers, where he arrived on Saturday.
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