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Deadly factional clashes flare again in Gaza

June 12, 2007 00:00:00


Palestinian gunmen attend the funeral of Mohammed al-Swerke, a member of President Mahmoud Abbas' guards, who was killed during fighting between Hamas and Fatah militants in Gaza Monday.
GAZA CITY, Jun 11 (AFP): Factional violence flared again in Gaza Monday between Hamas and Fatah after three weeks of calm, with loyalists of the rival parties shot and flung to their deaths from high-rise buildings.
Seven people, including one civilian, have been killed in the lawless territory since the latest bout of fighting erupted Thursday.
Egyptian mediators, who for months had been trying to calm tensions between the two sides, Monday once again persuaded the rivals to agree to a new truce, but shots were heard shortly after it was due to take effect.
Numerous previous ceasefires had been violated within hours of taking effect since the first major bout of factional violence erupted in December. Since then, more than 160 people have been killed.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas called for an end to the bloodshed after warning last week that the strife left Palestinians on the brink of a civil war and was as damaging, if not more so, than the 40-year Israeli occupation.
"What's happening in Gaza is regrettable and very harming. Both parties are working seriously with the Egyptian brothers to put an end to it," Abbas told reporters in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
The factional fighting in one of the world's most densely populated areas, along with renewed Israeli attacks in response to militant rockets, have threatened to sink international efforts to jumpstart the dormant peace process.
The levels of animosity between the rivals locked in a bitter power struggle has reached new highs after more than a year of steadily rising tensions that followed Hamas's rout of Abbas's long-dominant Fatah in a parliamentary poll in January 2006.

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