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Israel launches twin air strikes on Gaza: army

Israel's Lieberman says leftist NGOs aid terror
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 10, 2011 - Outspoken Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman on Monday accused local left-wing activist groups of aiding militants who seek to harm the Jewish state's security. "It is clear that we are talking here of organisations which are pure accomplices to terror," he told members of his ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party in remarks broadcast on army radio. "Their entire aim is to weaken (the Israeli military) and to weaken its resolve to defend citizens of the state of Israel," he said.

The radio said Lieberman also criticised members of his party who did not support a measure last week to launch a parliamentary investigation into the funding of human rights groups allegedly helping to build war-crimes cases abroad against Israeli military personnel. The scope and details of the inquiry, which is being championed by Yisrael Beitenu, are still to be finalised by the parliament's House Committee. Physicians for Human Rights, one of the NGOs likely to be a target if such an inquiry goes ahead, challenged Lieberman on Monday to find any impropriety in its accounts. "If Minister Lieberman, or other officials for that matter, have suspicions about our work or grounds on which to file a complaint against us, we encourage them to do so. We don't have anything to hide," it said in a statement.

"Our activities, which aim to bring about a more fair and inclusive society, are carried out by hundreds of committed volunteers, physicians, and staff. Minister Lieberman could learn a thing or two from them, especially with regards to the values of fairness, compassion, and democracy," it said. The Association for Civil Rights in Israel said on Monday that Lieberman's anger showed that his policies did not have wall-to-wall support even among fellow conservatives in the Knesset, Israel's parliament. "It turns out that even among right-wing Knesset members, he finds potential traitors," it said in a statement. "Time and again, the foreign minister proves that he does not understand how civil society operates in a democratic country. The role of human rights organisations is to criticise, hold up a mirror and point out possible failures by the authorities," it added.
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 10, 2011
Israeli warplanes launched twin air strikes on the Gaza Strip overnight in response to rocket and mortar fire from the Hamas-controlled territory, an army spokesman said on Monday.

The strikes targeted "centres of terrorist activities, which have been hit", said the spokesman, referring to projectiles fired from Gaza over the weekend.

Israel considers the Islamist Hamas movement as the only organisation responsible for the firing of the missiles "even if it does not claim responsibility," said the spokesman.

In December 2008, Israel launched its devastating "Operation Cast Lead" into the Gaza Strip in response to rocket and mortar fire.

The 22-day war, which ended in a ceasefire on January 18, 2009, killed 1,400 Palestinians, mostly civilians, and 13 Israelis, 10 of them soldiers.

In its wake the number of Palestinian attacks dropped significantly, although 230 rockets and mortar rounds were fired at Israel during 2010, according to army figures.

Right wingers in the Israeli government called on Sunday for tough military action against Gaza militants after a violent weekend on Israel's border with the Palestinian coastal enclave.

"The government must consider afresh a policy of zero tolerance, exert a heavy price, not let this situation deteriorate," National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau told journalists at the weekly cabinet meeting.

"It needs to stop," added Landau, a veteran hawk from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party.

The military said two rockets had slammed into southern Israel on Sunday, one shortly after midnight and a second later in the morning, bringing the number of rockets and mortar rounds fired across the border this year to 20.

On Saturday, three people on an Israeli kibbutz were wounded, two of them seriously, by mortar fire from the Gaza Strip, for which the militant group Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility.

That followed a border firefight between militants and Israeli troops on Friday in which an Israeli soldier was killed by so-called friendly fire.

Israel has so far responded to nearly every instance of projectile fire with air strikes on the Gaza Strip.

earlier related report
US sets talks with Israeli, Palestinian negotiators
Washington (AFP) Jan 10, 2011 - Israeli and Palestinian envoys are expected to hold separate talks in Washington this week with US officials including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as part Washington's bid to revive peace negotiations, the State Department said Monday.

Spokesman Philip Crowley said Israeli envoy Yitzhak Molcho and Palestinian Saeb Erakat "will come to Washington to meet separately with US officials as part of our ongoing consultations with the parties at the working level to achieve a framework agreement on all core issues."

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is currently on visiting the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Qatar, may participate in these discussions, he said.

Crowley added that the two envoys will not meet with each other but that US Middle East envoy George Mitchell is also likely to speak to each of them.

Direct peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians collapsed after Washington admitted it had failed to secure Israel's agreement to a new freeze on settlement building, the Palestinian condition for continuing to negotiate.

Direct talks began on September 2, but stalled three weeks later with the end of an Israeli moratorium on settlement building. The Palestinians refused to talk while Israel continued building.



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WAR REPORT
Most nations to recognise us in 2011: Palestinians
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Jan 9, 2011
Most of the world's nations will announce recognition of a Palestinian state by September 2011, Palestinian foreign minister Riyad al-Malki said on Sunday. "The majority of the international community will recognise an independent Palestinian state" by September, Malki told a group of Palestinian journalists in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Malki said the European Union had already exp ... read more







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