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    Sharon says offensive will continue


    REUTERS, JERUSALEM AND BRUSSELS
    Tuesday, Apr 09, 2002, Page 1

    A Palestinian girl covers her ears as she runs under sniper fire in the old section of Bethlehem yesterday. In the fifth day of their standoff with Palestinians holed up in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, Israeli troops and tanks opened fire at the building, causing a blaze in the offices belonging to an adjacent monastery.
    PHOTO: REUTERS
    Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon vowed yesterday to press ahead with a sweeping military offensive in the West Bank in direct defiance of US demands for a withdrawal.

    Battles raged between troops and gunmen in the northern West Bank cities of Jenin and Nablus, and Israeli troops fired shots at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, where 200 gunmen and civilians are holed up. Each side said the other fired first.

    Sharon's comments to parliament put him on collision course with Washington, which provides US$3 billion in annual aid to Israel, but he is widely expected to withdraw troops when US Secretary of State Colin Powell visits Israel later this week.

    European Commission President Romano Prodi also hinted yesterday the EU might review its trade pact with Israel because of its military offensive in the West Bank.

    Sharon said in an hour-long speech at a stormy session of parliament that he had promised US President George W. Bush to try to end the 10-day-old campaign as soon as possible and floated a proposal for peace talks with "moderate" Arab leaders.

    An Israeli soldier prays beside his tank at the entrance to the Palestinian controlled city of Jenin on Sunday.
    PHOTO: REUTERS
    But Sharon gave no indication of an imminent pullout, saying Israeli forces must first complete the dismantling of a "terror infrastructure" he said was directed by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and was responsible for a wave of suicide attacks on Israelis.

    Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat accused Sharon of wrecking Powell's mission, intended to end violence that has raged since Palestinians began an uprising against Israeli occupation more than 18 months ago.

    "Sharon has ended Powell's visit before he comes here," Erekat said. "He is telling Powell don't come because `we have finished everything, we are setting up buffer zones, we will continue the occupation and we will not end our operations.'"

    Powell arrived in Morocco yesterday at the start of a mission that will take him to Egypt and Spain before a meeting with Sharon in Jerusalem expected at the end of the week.

    Sharon said the army's goals "have not been completed and [it] will continue to operate with as much speed as possible until they are completed."

    Palestinians have accused Israel of trying to topple the Palestinian Authority and permanently reoccupy Palestinian cities in an offensive in which the army says it has killed at least 200 Palestinians in the past 10 days.

    Bush has urged Sharon to withdraw troops "without delay," saying a failure to do so would endanger Powell's mission. Sharon said only that he had told Bush he would accelerate Israel's military moves ahead of any withdrawal.

    Bush's call was echoed by European Commission chief Prodi.

    "The Israeli government must immediately pull out its forces from recently occupied territories," Prodi said in Brussels.

    "I am increasingly concerned about the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territories. It is beyond any doubt that aid is now urgently needed and that the situation in the West Bank is rapidly turning into a major humanitarian crisis."

    Asked whether the EU might suspend the association agreement that gives the Jewish state preferential trade terms with the bloc, Prodi said the treaty was an important "instrument of dialogue." But -- in marked contrast to last week's official EU line -- he left the door open to a possible review.

    In Bethlehem, the army said gunmen fired and threw grenades from the compound of the Church of the Nativity at soldiers surrounding it and troops fired back after two Israeli border policemen were wounded. The Palestinians denied firing first.

    "This is an act of indescribable barbarity. It is a violation of every law of humanity and civilization," said Father David Jaeger, spokesman for custodians of Catholic sites in the Holy Land, who is currently in Rome.

    Witnesses said a Palestinian policeman had been shot dead at the compound of the church built on the spot where Christians believe Jesus was born. A fire started in the compound but was quickly put out. Its cause could not be independently verified.

    Sources in Jenin refugee camp said Israeli forces had fired about 20 missiles overnight. Fighting continued in Nablus, the largest Palestinian-ruled city in the West Bank.

    Palestinians said soldiers raided the Palestinian-ruled village of Ashawera, east of Bethlehem, but withdrew from the village of Yatta near the West Bank city of Hebron, leaving a trail of destruction.

    Sharon told the Knesset, or parliament, that the military would withdraw to buffer zones between Israel and the West Bank when the offensive eventually ends. He gave no details.

    "Arafat has established a regime of terror in the territories under his control," Sharon said in an address interrupted repeatedly by Arab-Israeli legislators who were then shouted down by other members of the assembly.

    "The gangs of murderers have a leader ... and the aim is to force us out of here," he said. "The one who sends them is the head of the Palestinian Authority, Yasser Arafat."
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