Israel reopens Gaza crossings

Published: July 8, 2008 at 12:29 PM
ISRAELI SECURITY PATROLS NEAR THE ISRAELI SECURITY WALL AT THE QALANDIYAH CHECKPOINT

GAZA, July 8 (UPI) -- Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak Tuesday reopened border crossings between Israel and Gaza after earlier mortar fire prompted their closings.

The Jerusalem Post, without naming sources, reported Barak made the decision to allow the movement of goods and humanitarian aid into Gaza at the urging of Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, who reportedly told Barak that reopening the crossings would help in negotiations with Palestinian militants Hamas, who control Gaza.

Israel and Hamas are meeting to secure the release of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. A Hamas delegation was set to arrive in Cairo Tuesday to discuss Shalit as well as the option of reopening another crossing, the Post said.

"There are several small offshoots (of the major terror groups) in Gaza trying to disrupt the truce, but we have one address, and that is Hamas," an unnamed Israeli security official told the newspaper. "We know Hamas has dispatched forces to track down these renegade cells, but (the group) is not (doing) enough."

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Values influence floral purchases (54 min)
When flu should trigger a school shutdown
NBA: LA Lakers 104, New Orleans 88
NFL: Dallas 20, Philadelphia 16
NBA: Sacramento 120, Golden State 107
Poll: Many can't get H1N1 vaccine
China complains of protectionism
fark
Girl, 12, gives birth to boy for her 15-year-old husband. In Tennessee? West Virginia? No, New South...
12-year-old girl suspended from school for piercing her nose, which perfectly normal in India, not...
When searching for your dog, always look under car first before reaching underneath. That shadow...
State Senator forgets he's supposed to make drugs sound bad, not cool; describes Oxycontin as "a...
After her husband gets locked up for dealing meth, pissed-off wife goes undercover, takes down major...
Afghans replace opium poppies with bumper wheat crop, gluten intolerance grips nation