Thursday, November 24, 2005

A7news: Two Jihad Terrorists Give Up

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Two Senior Jihad Leaders Give Up
The IDF was beginning to raze a house in Jenin last night when the two terrorists inside decided to choose life rather than martyrdom, and gave themselves up.
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Headlines:
 1. Two Senior Jihad Leaders Give Up
 2. Likud Begins Re-Grouping
 3. Six Girls in Prison Until the End of Proceedings
 4. Daniel Pinner Continues to Sit as Trial Drags On
 5. Hizbullah Terror Efforts Inside and Outside Israel
 6. Enough is Enough: Kfar Darom Quits Hi-Rise Option
 7. Army Rescues Israeli Who Hang-Glided into Lebanon
 8. Comptroller: "PM Sharon Distributed Millions Without Approval"

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Editor: Hillel Fendel
Thursday, November 24, 2005
22 Cheshvan 5766

 

1. Two Senior Jihad Leaders Give Up
By Hillel Fendel

The IDF was beginning to raze a house in Jenin last night when the two terrorists inside decided to choose life rather than martyrdom, and gave themselves up.

One of them, Iyad Abu A-Roub, was responsible for a series of murderous attacks against Israelis, including last month's bombing in Hadera (six killed), the Stage Club attack in Tel Aviv in February (five dead), and the suicide bombing in Netanya outside the HaSharon Mall this summer (five killed).

The siege on the house in central Jenin in which A-Roub hid out lasted almost a full day. The terrorists fired at the soldiers, and when bulldozers began razing the building, they surrendered. Inside the house were found weapons and night-vision equipment. Three soldiers were lightly injured in the exchange of fire, and the PA reported that 11 Arabs were wounded.

Just ten days ago, the top Hamas terrorist in Shechem reacted differently; when an Israeli force neared his home, he burst out of the building, shooting wildly with his Kalachnikov, and the soldiers returned fire and killed him.

In another incident, two weeks ago in Jenin, an IDF force surrounded a building in which a wanted terrorist was hiding, called upon him repeatedly to surrender, and then bulldozed the building atop him.

A-Roub was the head of the military wing in Jenin. Together with him in both planning attacks and the surrender was his deputy, Firas Abu A-Roub, who was also wanted by Israel.

The IDF operation in Jenin began on Wednesday morning, when forces entered the Palestinian Authority-controlled city in search of several wanted terrorists. In a similar operation in Shechem last night, the IDF arrested two wanted Islamic Jihad terrorists and another one of Hamas. Three other terrorists were arrested in Bethlehem and Ramallah.

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2. Likud Begins Re-Grouping
By Hillel Fendel

The Sharon-shorn Likud Central Committee will convene this evening at Exhibition Grounds in Tel Aviv to decide the party's schedule for the coming weeks until the elections.

The top priority is to set a date - most likely December 19 - for the primaries, in which the party's chairman and Prime Ministerial candidate will be chosen. In the event that no candidate receives at least 40% of the vote, a run-off between the two top vote-getters will be held on Dec. 26.

Six Likud members have announced their candidacy for the party's top spot:
* Front-running former Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who served as Finance Minister until this summer and is now a Knesset Member,
* MK Uzi Landau, fired by Ariel Sharon from his Public Security Minister post,
* Moshe Feiglin, head of the party's Manhigut Yehudit (Jewish Leadership) faction,
* Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom,
* Defense Minister Sha'ul Mofaz, who is not a Knesset Member,
* Agriculture Minister Yisrael Katz.

Army Radio reported today that Likud members are "unhappy" with Mofaz's attack yesterday on Netanyahu, saying it will help [Labor Party leader] Amir Peretz in the coming elections. Mofaz sharply attacked Netanyahu's financial policies, noting that Netanyahu had "never known a day of suffering in his life," and was one of those leaders who were "born with a silver spoon in his mouth."

Feiglin, speaking this morning, said, "For Mofaz to express himself that way against Netanyahu shows that the last thing that concerns him is the Likud."

Arutz-7 asked Mofaz's office how he plans to ward off attacks by the other parties in the coming election campaign that will be based on Mofaz's remarks. Arutz-7 further asked if his derogatory remarks about Netanyahu do not signify that in the event that Netanyahu wins the primaries, Mofaz plans to leave the Likud and possibly join Sharon's new party.

In response, Mofaz's assistant spokesperson issued the following response: "Minister Mofaz will remain in the Likud under all circumstances, and he intends to win the primaries and lead the Likud to victory."

Education Minister Limor Livnat (Likud) says that the mutual attacks among the party's candidates will calm down in a couple of days.

At tonight's convention, the only speaker will be Acting Likud Chairman Tzachi HaNegbi [pictured above] The candidates will sign a "Fair Campaign" charter, formulated by Minister Danny Naveh.

Within the Likud, it is feared that some Sharon-sympathizers plan to remain in the party as "spies" or "Trojan horses." Knesset candidate Danny Danon, Chairman of the party's Betar Movement, is operating a special "informant" hotline at which party members can report on such occurrences. Forty reports of suspected "defectors" have been received thus far.

"Our goal is to prevent Sharon activists within the Likud to benefit from both worlds," Danon said. "There is only a small minority like that. We will transfer the names to the party secretariat, wait for their response, and if they don't defend themselves, we'll make sure to distance them from the Likud."

Sharon's new party, now named Kadima (Forward) after the name National Responsibility was tried and scrapped, was officially registered with the Parties Registrar today.

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3. Six Girls in Prison Until the End of Proceedings
By Hillel Fendel

Six girls, aged 13-15, are being held in jail until the end of proceedings after they got into a fight with Arabs. Their appeal was rejected, and another hearing is set only for Dec. 5.


The girls were arrested after they clashed with a group of Arab olive harvesters in the Shilo-Sinjil area. Unlike scuffles that take place elsewhere, the six girls were arrested - none of the Arabs were - and the police "misused their authority" by keeping them in jail for so long, their lawyer said.

Originally arrested on Nov. 13, the girls were originally kept in prison for four days, despite two court orders for their release.

The day after they were finally released, they returned to court for a hearing on the Prosecution's request to incarcerate them once again until the end of the legal proceedings in their case. The judge acceded to the request, and placed the young girls into prison once again.

The girls' lawyer, Ephraim Katzir of the Honenu legal organization, filed an appeal, which was rejected by Jerusalem District Court Judge Yosef Shapira on Tuesday. Shapira did, however, order the consideration of a form of house arrest for the six.

However, to the girls' consternation, a judge today set the date for presenting the alternatives for Dec. 5 - eleven days from now.

A Honenu official said that the judge made this decision after seeing that the proposals were not ready today. "It's clearly not realistic to have the alternatives ready in just two days," he said, "but neither is there any reason to wait two weeks."

Honenu is planning to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court as early as today, and hopes that the appeal will be heard tomorrow, Friday.

Aside from the six girls, only two other Disengagement-related arrestees remain in prison. One of them is the sister of one of the six, who refuses to recognize the non-Halakhic [Jewish legal] court's right to punish her, and Daniel Pinner of Kfar Tapuach, who was arrested in June for allegedly shooting an Arab on the Gush Katif beach.

Honenu is planning a gathering of all those who were indicted for Disengagement protest-related activities in the past half-year in the Old City of Jerusalem tonight. Among other things, legal and public strategy and advice will be discussed and proffered.

Haaretz reported today that Honenu is "trying to raise money for Yitzhak Rabin's assassin, Yigal Amir, and his wife, Larissa Trimbobler." Honenu director Shmuel Medad explained to Arutz-7, however, that this is not true.

"We are not 'trying to raise money,'" he said, "but rather, if someone wants to donate, and specifies that his money is to be used for Amir, we have a special fund set up by which this can be done. Even the Civil Liberties Association of Israel has taken action on behalf of Amir and Trimbobler's human rights."

Trimbobler told Haaretz that the money was to be used to pay a lawyer to represent her and Amir in their legal battles, and is aimed at "stopping political persecution of Yigal Amir and the denial of his basic rights; stopping the perverse vengeance of the establishment; and carrying out a legal battle for basic rights."

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4. Daniel Pinner Continues to Sit as Trial Drags On
By Hillel Fendel

Holding the record for most jail time for Disengagement protest-related activities is Daniel Pinner, 38, of Kfar Tapuach. He has been held "until the end of the legal proceedings" since June.

Palm Beach Hotel in better times
Pinner was arrested on June 22 for allegedly firing at and injuring an Arab "with intent to cause harm" on the Gush Katif beach. He says that the Arabs were attacking at the time - and in fact the Arab participants admitted in court that they were throwing rocks.

Pinner, an unmarried licensed electrician, was in Gush Katif at the time to volunteer his services in the refurbishing of the Palm Beach Hotel for new families. His trial is underway, and appeals to release him from prison have been rejected several times - though not always for legal reasons. A Supreme Court decision on his appeal of his extended incarceration is expected - though it is not known when.

In addition, Pinner's attorney Baruch Ben-Yosef today filed another appeal, to the District Court, against his continued incarceration. Ben-Yosef said that as the trial proceeds, the weakness of the Prosecution's case becomes clearer. "My client admits that he fired," Ben-Yosef says, "but not at the Arab in question - and there is no proof that it was his bullet that hit him."

Despite his tribulations, Pinner seems to have not lost his sense of humor. He describes his court hearings in the following manner:
"...It was Wednesday 28 September, and I was up for the second hearing of my trial... Justice was proceeding at its usual sedate, calm pace, undisturbed by such concepts as presumption of innocence, factual evidence, or the right to a speedy trial. The hearing itself was comparatively brief--about an hour or so, in which two police officers in charge of the interrogation testified that: ...

• yes, they found a spent cartridge from my Uzi;
• no, they had not bothered to check the range or angle of fire to see if that could possibly have been the bullet which allegedly hit Nasser Wafi;
• no, they had not been able to run an identity parade to ask the Arab eye-witnesses if I was the shooter;
• no, they could not explain why it was impossible to do an identity parade;
• no, they could not explain why the police did not think of photographing me in order to run a photographic identity parade.

"The next hearing--the third--had been scheduled for 10 October, a week and a half later. At the end of the hearing, a funny thing happened: the judge, Ruth Barkai, casually mentioned that, by the way, she has another case that day, a more important case, in which she will be one of the panel of three judges. Therefore, she postponed the next hearing by another month... to 6 November.

"My attorney, Baruch Ben-Yosef, drew her attention to the fact that meanwhile, while the court takes its own sweet time, a man is sitting in jail. Barkai, with admirable restraint and a sharp glance at attorney Ben-Yosef, said: 'Yes, I know. No problem. November 6, 9:00 in the morning.'

"Now, it's not that the court is incapable of acting quickly... It's more that the individual's liberty is considered cheap and dispensable. And so, I have a recommendation for the honorable Court of Justice: instead of postponing the next hearing to 6 November 2005, postpone it instead to 22 June 2008. This will solve a lot of problems: no one--neither the lawyer for the prosecution, nor the lawyer for the defense, nor Her Honor the Judge, is yet taken up on that day. More importantly: by then, I will have been under arrest for three years, by which time the verdict of guilty/not guilty will be irrelevant. If I am not guilty, I will be released forthwith; and if the Court should decide that I am guilty, then I will already have served the required time in prison. That 2008 hearing can be brief--no more than a few moments needed to rise as Her Honor the Judge enters the courtroom. This, of course, will save the Honorable Court much of its precious time... "

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5. Hizbullah Terror Efforts Inside and Outside Israel
By Ezra HaLevi

Lebanon is demanding that Israel hand over the bodies of Hizbullah terrorists, while an Israeli-Arab was indicted Thursday for assisting the terror group.


Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora told reporters in Qatar Wednesday, “What is required [from Israel] is a handover of the bodies of the resistance fighters who fell as martyrs during the latest confrontations in order to defuse the tension on Lebanon's international border.”

The bodies referred to are those of the Hizbullah terrorists whose attempt to kidnap IDF soldiers during Monday’s rocket-barrages were thwarted by an alert IDF hesder soldier (see below for Israel National TV segment on the heroic soldier).

Click "play" to view video - click here if video does not appear



Lebanese government minister Muhammad Jawad Khalif, known to have strong ties with the Hizbullah terror group, repeated the demand on Lebanon’s state-run radio, threatening kidnappings if it is not met. “[Hizbullah] will try to secure the return of the bodies one way or another,” he said, “which usually ends in negotiations to exchange them for the bodies of Israeli soldiers or prisoners."

Israel Radio reported Thursday that Israel had already agreed to give the bodies back and is negotiating with Lebanon through the Red Cross – a claim denied by the IDF spokesman.

Meanwhile, an Israeli-Arab from Nazareth was indicted Thursday for having extensive contacts with Hizbullah and planning to provide the terror group with intelligence information to carry out high-profile attacks on the Jewish state.

The man, 38, is accused to being in contact with a Hizbullah recruiter from Uganda whom he met while visiting his in-laws in South Africa in August. The recruiter, Abu Muhammad, asked the man to collect and transfer information on IDF bases, security facilities and arms factories in Israel and told him he would be paid for his efforts.

In September, the Israeli-Arab traveled to Bulgaria, where he spoke with Abu Muhammad via a cell phone he was provided. The recruiter suggested that he buy a specific restaurant near a security facility in Haifa together with an Israeli Jew – which could be used to befriend and gain the confidence of security personnel. He also promised that Hizbullah would give him $1,000,000 for the deal.

The suspect was given $1,000 and the names of two Israel police intelligence officers whom he was advised to befriend and supply with information. The objective was to acquire the names of drug dealers and undercover Shabak (General Security Service) agents, which would then be passed on to Hizbullah.

In two separate incidents in the south, IDF and border police intercepted weapons and drug smuggling efforts at the Egyptian border, arresting a number of suspects.

Fifteen Kalashnikov AK-47 assault rifles and an equal number of magazines were intercepted in one operation, and hundreds of pounds of marijuana were confiscated in the other.

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6. Enough is Enough: Kfar Darom Quits Hi-Rise Option
By Hillel Fendel

After more than three months in hotels, many expelled residents from Gush Katif and the Shomron - contrary to popular perception - still do not have housing solutions for the immediate future.

The 58 families of the former Jewish Gaza community of Kfar Darom, for instance, have been told time and again that their move to a high-rise building in Ashkelon was just a matter of time, and that they could expect to move within a short time. In fact, after several delays and postponements, some families actually began moving their belongings this week into what they thought would be their home for the coming 2-3 years.

But then came the last straw. The homeless citizens were told that the company that would be taking responsibility for the apartments - Amigur, a public housing provider - had a new series of demands, and that a new delay was forthcoming.

The Kfar Darom residents, who have remained a cohesive group despite the travails and uncertainty of the expulsion and, convened for an emergency meeting on Tuesday night, and decided: "The Ashkelon building is out."

The Disengagement Authority was apparently taken by surprise by the announcement, and immediately responded on two fronts: Via leaks to the media of "fury" at the residents for backtracking on the agreement, and by contacting Kfar Darom leaders and asking for a meeting, apparently as early as this evening.

"I don't know what will be," said one Kfar Darom resident, "but I can just say that this whole process is very taxing on our nerves."

Many families from N'vei Dekalim are also unsure about their future. Some of them are on their way to the Nitzan pre-fab community, north of Ashkelon, where the government has erected temporary homes - euphemistically calling them "caravilas" - for hundreds of families from Gush Katif.

Becky Winter, among the first N'vei Dekalim residents to move to Nitzan - she and her family moved in immediately after the expulsion - has taken upon herself to supervise the absorption of the new families. Her first priority is to find volunteers who can help: "Mainly we need handy volunteers who can help put together cabinets, do electric works, and the like." Within the coming weeks, 130 new families are expected.

Though 130 new homes are being prepared, this is not enough to meet the demand, and many families still have no solution.

In the meantime, the Disengagement Authority sent letters on Tuesday night to all the families who are "not eligible" - i.e., they did not own property in Gush Katif, but rather rented homes there - warning them that they must leave their hotels within a week. The families, both eligible and "not eligible" alike, reacted with resentment. "They expelled us from our homes and now they want to throw us out of the hotels," one N'vei Dekalim community council member was quoted as saying on Katif.net. "We will not cooperate with [this], and our friends who were uprooted from the Gush will leave the hotels only after an alternate housing site is found."

Rabbi Yosef AlNekaveh of N'vei Dekalim said, "Staying in a hotel is like forced hospitalization; we don't like it, and we want real homes. But as of now, there are no solutions for all the families. The state of Israel should have prepared communities for all of us."

The government made several decisions related to the expellees this week, including the following:

* 65 caravans [mobile homes without wheels] in Amatzia, between Beit Shemesh and Be'er Sheva. Each caravan is roughly 60 square meters large.

* The Construction Ministry must complete the construction of public buildings in Yad Binyamin, Ein Tzurim, Yated, and Yad Chana.

* The Agriculture Ministry will provide professional training for farmers "with the purpose of helping them transfer their activities to different climates and ground conditions than those they were accustomed to." Two courses of study will be offered: One in the Agriculture Faculty in Rehovot, where they can study five days a week for a year, and one in the Research and Development Farm in Eshkol, for one day a week for eight months.

* Aid will be given to some 30 families who move to Bustan HaGalil in the Galilee and open tourism businesses - bed-and-breakfasts - there.

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7. Army Rescues Israeli Who Hang-Glided into Lebanon
By Ezra HaLevi

Just two days after the Hizbullah terror group’s failed attempt to kidnap IDF soldiers, an Israeli citizen accidentally hang-glided into Lebanon, where the army had to rescue him.


The Israeli hang-glider intended to land in the Huleh Valley, but due to unusually strong winds, was swept over the Lebanese border, a few hundred feet from the border-fence.

Hizbullah terrorists spotted him and approached him, attempting to capture him and hold him hostage. When he began to run away, they opened fire, though he was not injured.

Witnesses in Manara, which overlooks the Huleh Valley, called security forces, who approached the fence and shot at Hizbullah terrorists from the Israeli side of the border. They then opened the crossing to enable the Israeli to flee to safety.

IDF forces continued to exchange fire with the terrorists following the incident.

Hizbullah issued a statement claiming that the IDF crossed into Lebanon, but the IDF rebuffs the claim.

Hang-gliders often fly over the lush Huleh Valley from Manara, but this time the strong gust of wind got the better of one.

The hang-glider told Israel Radio he was extremely grateful to the IDF for its quick action in saving his life. “Thanks to the army I am now in Israel and not Lebanon. If not for them, my situation would be very different – I would not be alive,” he said. “I went through a frightening ordeal, but thanks to the IDF I am back home.”

Earlier in the day, IDF jets dropped thousands of leaflets over Arab villages in southern Lebanon in an attempt to turn public opinion against Hizbullah.

The leaflets said, in Arabic:
"Dear Lebanese citizens: Who protects Lebanon? Who is lying to you? Who is sending your children to a battle they are not ready for? Who desires a return to the destruction? Who is the tool in the hand of its Syrian and Iranian masters?

"Hizbullah is causing enormous harm to Lebanon and Israel will protect its citizens,” concluded the leaflet, which was signed, “The State of Israel.”

Hizbullah spokesman Mohammed Afif said in a statement that the leaflets are "an expression of Israeli failures in facing Hizbullah."

Israeli Defense Minister Sha’ul Mofaz said the Israeli response to Hizbullah’s attacks, comprising return fire and the bombing of several Hizbullah positions and Lebanese targets, was a “measured one.”

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8. Comptroller: "PM Sharon Distributed Millions Without Approval"
By Ezra HaLevi

State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss delivered harsh criticism of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon Wednesday for passing millions of shekels to the security establishment without government approval.


Critics of the Disengagement Plan insisted throughout its implementation that the funds to finance the expulsion were in overwhelming excess of what was outlined in the state budget.

MK Uri Ariel (National Union) told the committee that a certain IDF general told him a few years ago,“The IDF doesn’t consider MKs” – meaning the IDF does not need to worry about Knesset approval to receive its funding.

At the meeting, the prevailing conclusion was to have the matter of the defense budgetary procedure passed to the Knesset Defense Committee.

Chairman of the Knesset Defense Committee Yuval Shteinitz (Likud) is calling for doing away with the Joint Committee for the Defense Budget altogether. He said that it failed to prevent unilateral decisions from being made by the prime minister.

“In the State of Israel, there is no parliamentary body overseeing the defense budget,” Shteinitz said. “The process by which the budget is approved by the joint committee is improper and suffering from a long series of fundamental flaws.”

Steinitz has begun formulating changes in the law to solve the problem, though the Defense Ministry and Knesset Finance Committee both oppose such a move.

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