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Tunnels Are Conduit for Weapons to Gaza
He said the military could not say whether the rate of digging tunnels _ or discovering them _ has increased since the Hamas takeover. The Egyptians have found 138 tunnels since September 2005, when Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip, handing it over to Palestinian control.
After the Israeli withdrawal, Egypt beefed up its presence at the border, deploying 750 guards. The smugglers responded by digging longer tunnels, penetrating past the immediate border area.
"Weapon smugglers dig tunnels that extend from Gaza to the heart of Rafah, which is why we need guards to go beyond the border line," an Egyptian intelligence official said, speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance with agency rules.
Border crossings in Rafah have been closed since the Hamas takeover and likely won't reopen as long as the militant group remains in control. European monitors at the crossings fled during the fighting, and the official Palestinian security forces _ dominated by Abbas' Fatah faction _ have been eliminated from Gaza.
That has left Hamas guarding the border from its side. During Sunday's tour, a tent of Hamas fighters in black uniforms was visible on the Gaza side.
Fawzi Barhoum, a Hamas spokesman in Gaza, said the group has 200 fighters at the border. He insisted Hamas was "making great efforts to protect the area" but would not comment on tunnels or smuggling.
Mamdouh, who heads a military office for liaison with international organizations, said the Egyptian side has "no contact at all with Hamas" about running the border, but said the militant group was trying to show it can control the area, which during times of closure has been plagued by violence as Palestinians try to break into or out of Gaza.
"It's very calm. They are trying to give the world a good image by keeping everything quiet on the border area," he said.
Israeli government spokesman David Baker said Hamas was still trying to smuggle weapons. "It is encouraging this and taking extensive efforts to bring this about," he said. He would not comment on Egyptian efforts to stop smuggling.
Most of the tunnels _ which are also used for drug smuggling _ are dug from the Gaza side, usually about 2 1/2 feet in diameter and extending 100 to 800 yards into Rafah, Mamdouh said. They are dug using homemade tools and sometimes even have electric lights.
Rafah's Bedouin residents are paid to allow the tunnel entryways to be hidden in their homes.
In one house, next to the Salaheddin Gate crossing, Mamdouh showed journalists the most recent discovery: a tunnel found a week ago hidden in a backyard where the family's ducks and chickens are kept.
In the house's kitchen was another hole, plugged with rocks by authorities after it was found weeks earlier. The owners of the home have fled and were sentenced in absentia to 10 years in prison in a military trial.
The owner of the house where the tunnel was discovered in the bedroom closet has been captured and was sentenced to 10 years in prison, Mamdouh said.
Egypt has denounced Hamas' takeover of Gaza and has joined Arab and international efforts to isolate it. But it also runs the risk of a provoking a backlash if it is seen as exacerbating the already deteriorating conditions for the 1.3 million Palestinians living in the impoverished territory.
Israel has allowed Egyptian trucks to take food aid into Gaza, along with aid passing through the Israeli side, to prevent a deepening of the humanitarian crisis there.
Some 4,000 Palestinians from Gaza have been stuck on the Egyptian side of the border since the closure. Israel has approved the return of 627 of them by passing through Israeli territory, and they began going home Sunday and Monday.



