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WAR REPORT
Suspected settler attack on Israel army cars
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 7, 2011

Israel kills Gaza militant in air strike
Gaza City (AFP) Sept 7, 2011 - An Israeli air strike on a car in the Gaza Strip killed a Palestinian militant on Wednesday hours after a rocket struck Israel without causing casualties, medics and the militant group said.

The hardline Islamic Jihad group said that the dead man, Remah al-Hasani, was a member of its military wing, the Al-Quds Brigades.

He was killed as he was driving in the central Deir al-Balah district of the territory, medics said.

An Israeli military spokeswoman was not immediately able to confirm the air strike.

On Tuesday evening, an Israeli air raid on Gaza killed a militant and wounded a father and his two sons, Palestinian medical sources and a militant group said.

The strike, east of the central city of Khan Yunis, killed Popular Resistance Committees (PRC) member Khaled Sahmud, 24, and came after militants fired a mortar round to push back an "Israeli incursion," the group said in a statement.

On Monday night, warplanes bombed a suspected weapons manufacturing site in the central Gaza Strip after a rocket was fired.

The new mortar and rocket fire and retaliatory air strikes have come despite a ceasefire that came into force after a spasm of violence that followed a militant attack in Eilat on August 18, which left eight Israelis dead.

Israel responded with a series of air strikes on Gaza, killing 27 Palestinians, and militant groups in the coastal enclave fired dozens of rockets into the Jewish state.

Unidentified "vandals" have attacked Israeli military vehicles, slashing tyres and spraying graffiti in an apparent response to the demolition of West Bank settlement homes, the army said on Wednesday.

In a statement, the military said the attack occurred overnight at a base north of Ramallah in the West Bank.

"Overnight, initial reports indicate that unidentified vandals broke into a military base north of Ramallah and vandalised thirteen vehicles," the statement said.

The attackers punctured tyres, shattered windows and sprayed "graffiti against IDF (Israel Defence Forces) commanders and against dismantling of structures in the Jewish community of Migron earlier this week," it added.

"Police (are) currently investigating the incident viewed by the IDF as severe."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak strongly condemned the attack, which the premier called "despicable criminality aimed at commanders and vehicles that protect the lives of Jewish citizens in Judea and Samaria," using the Biblical name for the West Bank.

In a statement, Barak stressed that the perpetrators "will shortly be apprehended."

"Acts of vandalism against Israelis and Palestinians are aimed at disrupting the routine in Judea and Samaria and causing an escalation in these sensitive times," he added.

The Yesha Council, which represents the settler movement, strongly condemned the vandalism.

"The perpetrators should immediately hand themselves over to the police, and the security forces should uproot this despicable phenomenon," they said in a statement.

"This is a moral crime of the worst type, which causes huge damage to the settler movement in Judea and Samaria."

The statement said the attack "runs counter to the values and conscience of hundreds of thousands of Israelis living in the region, who were no less hurt by the destruction of the Migron structures than the criminals."

Overnight on Sunday, hundreds of police and soldiers entered the West Bank settlement outpost of Migron and dismantled three structures under a defence ministry order backed by the Supreme Court.

Hardline settlers have adopted what they call a "price tag" policy under which they attack Palestinians and their property in response to Israeli government measures against settlements.

But a military spokesman said this appeared to be the first time a "price tag" attack had been carried out against military property.

On Monday, the day after the demolition, a group of attackers set fire to a mosque in the Palestinian West Bank town of Qusra.

The attackers sprayed Hebrew graffiti on the mosque's exterior walls, including insults against the Prophet Mohammed, a Star of David, and the word "Migron."

The attack was condemned by the Palestinians and the European Union, as well as by Netanyahu.

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China says supports Palestinian UN bid
Beijing (AFP) Sept 7, 2011 - China said Wednesday it supported an independent state of Palestine and would back the Palestinians' controversial bid for membership of the United Nations.

"An independent state is an inalienable, lawful right of the Palestinian people as well as the foundation and pre-condition of realising peaceful coexistence between Palestine and Israel," foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters.

"We understand, respect and support Palestine's plan to submit the issue to the UN."

The Palestinians will formally submit their request for UN membership to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on September 20 when world leaders begin gathering in New York for the 66th session of the General Assembly.

The decision comes almost a year after direct peace talks with Jerusalem ran aground due to a dispute over Israel's construction of settlements on occupied Palestinian land.

Israel is strongly opposed to the Palestinians' UN bid, saying negotiations are the only way to resolve the conflict and establish an independent Palestinian state -- a position backed by Washington.

According to the New York Times, the United States has launched a last-ditch diplomatic drive to persuade Palestinians to scrap the plan for UN recognition.

Washington is said to be seeking to draft a proposal for peace talks that will be acceptable to Israel, as well as Russia, the European Union and the UN -- the other members of the international peacemaking Quartet.

The Obama administration has reportedly made it clear it will veto any request presented to the UN Security Council to make a Palestinian state a new member outright.





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Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 6, 2011
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