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Order Begins to Return To Breached Gaza Border

Some Israelis Want Egypt to Control Strip

Tens of thousands of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip crossed into Egypt on Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2008, after masked gunmen blasted through a border wall.
Rafah
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By Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, January 25, 2008; Page A13

RAFAH, Gaza Strip, Jan. 24 -- Egyptian security forces began imposing control over the country's breached border with the Gaza Strip on Thursday, using clubs and dogs to police the thousands of Gazans still making their way past barricades blown up or toppled by Palestinian gunmen a day earlier.

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Some Israeli officials said the breach would allow them to push responsibility for Gaza's 1.5 million residents onto Egypt, drawing immediate objections from the Egyptian government.

"When Gaza is open to the other side, we lose responsibility for it," Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai said in a statement released by his aides, according to news agencies. "So we want to disconnect from it.

"We want to stop supplying electricity to them, stop supplying them with water and medicine, so it would come from another place," said Vilnai, a member of Israel's Labor Party, which has favored negotiations with Palestinians and the emergence of a Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak distanced himself from Vilnai's comments, but some Israeli leaders have long imagined Egypt taking control of Gaza, and Jordan becoming responsible for Palestinians in the West Bank.

Israeli officials generally have reacted mildly to the breach, saying they are watching to see how well Egypt regains control of the border.

"Some people are happy that this has happened," said one Israeli official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was relaying the private views of other officials. "Some people believe if they get all their needs from Egypt," he said of the Palestinians in Gaza, "that would mean we wouldn't have to do it, and the pressure on Israel from the humanitarian situation would disappear, or at least ease significantly."

Barak appeared to play down this approach. "I don't go too far in my interpretation of this," he told the Associated Press on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Hossam Zaki, a spokesman for Egypt's Foreign Ministry, said there was "no possibility" of Egypt taking more responsibility for Gaza. "This might be in the Israeli imagination, but it does not relieve them of the responsibility" under existing border accords and international law.

Severing the Gaza Strip from Israel could further jeopardize Palestinian hopes of uniting the West Bank and Gaza in a single Palestinian state. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Fatah movement was routed by the armed Hamas movement in Gaza last June, has repeatedly charged that Hamas's takeover endangered Palestinian statehood.

In Gaza City, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said Thursday that one goal of his movement "is to tie our economy to the Arab and Islamic economy and to liberate it from the Israeli monopoly." However, "the idea of separating Gaza from the West Bank and from Palestine is completely rejected by the Palestinians," he said.

Abu Zuhri spoke in a city noticeably emptier than just two days ago. A day after fighters blew open the border wall -- Hamas did not assert responsibility for the demolition, but Gaza residents say nothing of such magnitude could happen here without Hamas's knowledge -- Egypt's and Gaza's economies were starting to meld, at least temporarily.


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