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WAR REPORT
Israel strikes Gaza, blames Abbas for rocket fire
by Staff Writers
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) June 11, 2014


Jordan closes opposition Iraq TV channel: RSF
Amman (AFP) June 11, 2014 - Jordan has shut down an Amman-based Iraqi opposition television channel critical of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and arrested journalists, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said Wednesday.

Authorities raided the Al-Abasiya satellite station Monday and arrested 14 Iraqi, Jordanian and Syrian journalists after Baghdad accused it of "inciting terrorism and sectarian conflicts."

"We have often reported that Nuri al-Maliki gags the media in Iraq but it seems he is not content with that and now wants to silence critical media based outside his country," RSF said.

"At the same time, by bowing to pressure... from Baghdad, the Jordanians have flouted their international obligations regarding media freedom and protection from arbitrary arrest," it said.

The organisation, which claimed those arrested had been ordered detained for 14 days, called for their immediate release and the reopening of the TV station.

Jordan's Audiovisual Commission chief Amjad Qadi told AFP Al-Abasiya was broadcasting from Jordan illegally, without a licence.

"It worked secretly from an apartment in Amman and broadcast only after midnight. When the authorities raided the apartment, they found things that have nothing to do with the media," he added, without elaborating.

Qadi said the case was sent to the state security court because "Al-Abasiya was inciting terrorism and affecting Jordan and other countries."

RSF said the Iraqi authorities have initiated legal action against several other Iraqi satellite television stations for allegedly inciting violence and sectarianism in their broadcasts from Jordan.

Al-Abasiya, which began broadcasting from Amman four years ago, "has been critical of both the Maliki administration and Iran's alleged meddling in the region," it added.

Jordan ranked 141st and Iraq 153rd on the 2014 RSF Press Freedom Index.

An Israeli air strike killed a Palestinian in Gaza on Wednesday after new rocket fire from the territory prompted Israel's premier to warn he holds Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas responsible.

Two Palestinians were also wounded in the evening raid in the northern Gaza Strip, the emergency services said.

The dead man and one of the wounded were travelling on a motorbike and were the apparent targets. A young boy, who was passing by on foot. was also wounded.

The Israeli military said it had targeted "terrorists affiliated to the international jihad," its designation for Al-Qaeda inspired groups in Gaza.

Abbas, who swore in a new merged government for the Palestinian territories last week replacing the Hamas administration in Gaza, condemned the rocket fire, which Israeli officials said hit the Eshkol region without causing any casualties or damage.

Israel had previously held Hamas responsible for all rocket fire from Gaza, regardless of who carried it out.

Now, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holds Abbas, who heads the unity government, responsible, a spokesman said.

"Abbas is responsible and accountable for rockets that are fired at Israeli towns and cities by terrorists in the Gaza Strip," Ofir Gendelman wrote on Twitter.

Another Netanyahu spokesman released a statement demanding that Abbas disarm "terrorist" organisations in Gaza.

"Abbas claims that the new Palestinian government honours all previous commitments. So why has he not disarmed the terrorist organisations in Gaza as he is obligated to do," Mark Regev asked.

Reacting to the rocket fire, Abbas's office said he "condemns the rocket fire and calls for honouring past agreements."

The new government of independent technocrats agreed on between Abbas's Fatah party and Hamas, has said it will respect Israel and past peace agreements, and has given assurances that it renounces violence.

Hamas refuses to recognise Israel and is pledged to armed struggle against the Jewish state.

Some 140 rockets and mortar rounds fired from Gaza have hit southern Israel so far this year, the military says.

On June 1, two rockets from Gaza hit Israel, prompting retaliatory air strikes.

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