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Gaza border crossing tightened as Egypt-Hamas talks begin
Thu, Jan 31, 2008
AFP

RAFAH (Egypt) - THE Egypt-Gaza border was sealed off to Palestinian vehicles on Thursday as talks began in Cairo to resolve a crisis triggered when militants blew holes in the frontier barrier last week.

Egyptian security forces and militants from the Islamist movement Hamas which controls Gaza were working in tandem to control the frontier, an Egyptian policeman said.

'The order was given, there seems to have been an agreement,' the policeman said at Saladdin Gate, one of the two crossings linking the divided border town of Rafah.

However, pedestrian traffic was still moving in both directions despite driving rain, and at Brazil Gate, Egyptian-registered vehicles laden with merchandise, were being allowed to move in both directions.

All breaches in the border barrier, which was blown up by militants on January 22 after Israel imposed a punishing blockade on Gaza, have been closed by fencing and barbed wire.

Hundreds of thousands of Gazans took advantage of the breach to swarm across into Egypt from their largely isolated and impoverished territory.

Meanwhile, a delegation headed by Hamas political supremo Khaled Meshaal began talks in Cairo with Egypt's powerful intelligence chief General Omar Suleiman on finding a long-term solution to the issue of Gaza crossings, Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhum said.

It is the first visit to Egypt by the Damascus-based Meshaal since Hamas violently seized control of Gaza in June, an action criticised by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

On Wednesday, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas and Hamas hardened their positions on ways to control the Egypt-Gaza border.

After meeting Mubarak, Abbas reiterated his rejection of talks with Hamas and said the Islamist group's breach of the border last week amounted to an invasion.

'Hamas has to go back on its coup d'etat and... accept the legitimacy (of the Palestinian Authority), and then hearts and minds would be open for dialogue,' he said.

Under a 2005 deal, the Rafah crossing was to be supervised by European Union monitors with cameras to allow Israel to see those passing through.

The diplomatic push in Cairo follows the UN Security Council's failure on Tuesday to adopt a compromise statement on the Gaza breakout amid disagreements between Arab states and Israel's key ally the United States.

An Egyptian security force of around 20,000 has been deployed in the north of the Sinai peninsula since Saturday, a security source told AFP, many of them picking up Palestinians and returning them to the border.

Earlier this month, Israel imposed a total lockdown on Gaza to try to halt rocket fire. Just days later, it eased the stranglehold, but is continuing to limit the delivery of crucial fuel supplies. -- AFP

 

 
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Gaza border crossing tightened as Egypt-Hamas talks begin
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