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Houla death toll tops 100, U.N. says

The killings of more than 100 Syrian civilians, including nearly 50 children, provoked outrage around Syria and worldwide Sunday as horrific images of the bodies in Houla spread across the internet.

Videos posted Sunday on YouTube show demonstrations in cities around the country, including Damascus, Daraa, Idlib, and the suburbs of Hama.

“Oh Houla, we are with you until death,” protesters chanted in Daraa. And a demonstration in Idlib showed a U.N. vehicle among protesters. In the Hama suburbs, demonstrators called for President Bashar al-Assad to step down.

Syria’s government denied its troops were behind the bloodbath in Houla, and a Foreign Ministry spokesman denounced what he called a “tsunami of lies” against President Bashar al-Assad’s government. But the 14-month-old clampdown continued, with opposition activists reporting another 26 people — including five children and three women — killed across the country on Sunday.

At the United Nations, where Security Council members huddled for closed-door talks on the crisis, a senior U.N. official said said the death toll from Friday’s killings in Houla had now grown to 108. Herve Ladsous, the undersecretary-general for peacekeeping operations, said that figure came from Maj. Gen. Robert Mood, the head of the U.N. monitoring mission in Syria.

Sausan Ghosheh, the spokeswoman for the U.N. mission, said the dead included 34 women and 49 children under the age of 10.

Britain and the United States condemned the Houla massacre; so did Israel, in a rare public statement on the 14-month-old Syrian conflict.

U.N. monitors visited the town over the weekend, releasing video Sunday that depicts bodies being loaded into a truck and others being prepared for funerals. One man tells the monitors that shelling began after Friday prayers, and the killings didn’t stop until 2 a.m. Saturday.

Opposition activists said killings began with a mortar bombardment, followed by a rampage by government-allied militias. Video posted over the weekend showed opposition activists displaying the bloodied remains of more than 10 children, including some with limbs blown off or skulls torn open. In another, medics treated a crying infant whose chest was covered in bandages.

Syrian officials say government troops are fighting to protect their people from “terrorist gangs.” But Alex Thompson, a reporter for Britain’s ITV television network who was in Houla, said its residents appeared to be voting with their feet.

“There are lots of civilians in the rebel-held areas. They are not apparently frightened of the fighters. They are speaking openly to the United Nations,” Thomson told CNN. “In the areas of the town held by the army, there is nobody — it’s a ghost town.”

But Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi told reporters Sunday in Damascus, “We deny that the Syrian armed forces were responsible of what took place in Houla.” And on state-run media, the Syrian regime said “al Qaeda-linked terrorist groups committed two horrible massacres against a number of families in the towns of al-Shumariyeh and Taldo in the countryside of Homs province.”

The state report also showed gruesome images of children spattered with blood.

CNN can not independently confirm details from Syria nor the authenticity of videos, however, as the Syrian government strictly limits access by foreign journalists.

The White House joined the condemnation Sunday afternoon, with National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor saying the United States was horrifed by “credible reports” of the massacre, “including stabbing and ax attacks on women and children.”

“These acts serve as a vile testament to an illegitimate regime that responds to peaceful political protest with unspeakable and inhuman brutality,” Vietor said in a written statement.

And British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he had summoned the Syrian charge d’affaires in London to his office “so that we can underline our absolute horror at what has happened.”

“It is a familiar tactic of the Assad regime to blame others for what is happening in their country, to try to get out of responsibility for the scale of death and destruction,” he said.

The crisis began in March 2011, when peaceful demonstrations modeled on the “Arab Spring” uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt sprang up across Syria. Al-Assad’s government responded by turning police and troops on demonstrators — but the protests spread across the country, with defecting soldiers taking up up arms on behalf of the opposition.

Opposition: 88 killed in ‘barbaric act’ in central Syria

A cease-fire agreement, brokered by former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s office, has been in place since April 12 as part of a six-point peace plan. But Col. Qasim Saad Eddine, a spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army, said Saturday that it was “no longer possible to abide by the peace plan” after the Houla killings.

“This is a clear evidence that Kofi Annan’s plan is dead and a clear indication that Bashar Assad and his criminal gang do not understand anything but the language of force and violence,” Eddine said. He urged the U.N. Security Council to authorize airstrikes by member nations against government forces and strategic points.

A U.N. report issued Friday said Syrian forces are still using heavy weapons in many areas despite the April cease-fire, and “The overall level of violence in the country remains quite high” despite the presence of U.N. monitors. Monitors have heard the sound of shelling in cities and towns and seen the aftereffects, their report states, while Syrian authorities say they were coming under fire from rebel troops.

Meanwhile, opposition groups effectively control “significant parts of some cities” the monitors state. But the government’s stepped-up security crackdown “has led to massive violations of human rights” by Syrian troops and pro-government militias, the report states.

Makdissi, in his remarks Sunday, accused some U.N. countries of “openly working against Syria” and rejected the notion of an armed opposition in the country.

“There is no armed opposition in Syria. There is either an intellectual opposition, and we welcome their participation in national dialogue, or there are armed terrorist gangs that refuse the political resolution,” Makdissi said.

Sunday’s closed Security Council session comes a day ahead of a scheduled meeting between Syrian officials and Annan, the joint U.N.-Arab League special envoy on the crisis. And Hague was on his way to Moscow for talks with one of Syria’s leading allies. He said he will call on Russia to support rapid and unequivocal pressure on the Assad regime, as well as “accountability for crimes.”

“The important thing at the moment is to try to make the Annan plan work,” Hague said. But he added, “Time is running out for the Assad regime to adopt that plan, implement that plan and stop the torture, abuse and murder of their own people.”

Israel, meanwhile, has largely kept quiet amid the tumult of the Arab Spring in the surrounding region. But Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed his “revulsion” at the killings in Syria and its allies in Iran and the Lebanese Shiite Muslim militia Hezbollah.

“Iran and Hezbollah are an inseparable part of the Syrian atrocities and the world needs to act against them,” Netanyahu said in a written statement.

All three are Israel’s leading antagonists in the region. Israel has fought three wars against Syria since independence in 1948, fought innumerable skirmishes and a month-long 2006 conflict with Hezbollah and has repeatedly warned that it would not tolerate any Iranian effort to develop nuclear weapons.

The Arab League will meet Saturday in Doha to discuss Syria, according to a senior Arab League official. Foreign ministers are expected to attend, the official sending, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the media.

Since the Syrian regime and opposition members accepted the plan in March, at least 1,635 people have been killed, the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria said Saturday.

Turkey’s President on Egypt, Syria and Israel

Lt. Bassim al-Khaled, a spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Movement, said more bloodshed is coming. The al-Assad government is using the cease-fire and peace plan “to kill more people and is trying to crush the uprising,” al-Khaled said.

“So the only language this regime is going to understand is the language of the gun,” al-Khaled said. “Wait and see, we will make them pay for each drop of blood which was shed.”

U.N. officials say more than 9,000 people, mostly civilians, have died and tens of thousands have been uprooted since the uprising began in March 2011. Opposition groups report a death toll of more than 11,000 people.

The killings of more than 100 Syrian civilians, including nearly 50 children, provoked outrage around Syria and worldwide Sunday as horrific images of the bodies in Houla spread across the internet.

Videos posted Sunday on YouTube show demonstrations in cities around the country, including Damascus, Daraa, Idlib, and the suburbs of Hama.

“Oh Houla, we are with you until death,” protesters chanted in Daraa. And a demonstration in Idlib showed a U.N. vehicle among protesters. In the Hama suburbs, demonstrators called for President Bashar al-Assad to step down.

Syria’s government denied its troops were behind the bloodbath in Houla, and a Foreign Ministry spokesman denounced what he called a “tsunami of lies” against President Bashar al-Assad’s government. But the 14-month-old clampdown continued, with opposition activists reporting another 26 people — including five children and three women — killed across the country on Sunday.

At the United Nations, where Security Council members huddled for closed-door talks on the crisis, a senior U.N. official said said the death toll from Friday’s killings in Houla had now grown to 108. Herve Ladsous, the undersecretary-general for peacekeeping operations, said that figure came from Maj. Gen. Robert Mood, the head of the U.N. monitoring mission in Syria.

Sausan Ghosheh, the spokeswoman for the U.N. mission, said the dead included 34 women and 49 children under the age of 10.

Britain and the United States condemned the Houla massacre; so did Israel, in a rare public statement on the 14-month-old Syrian conflict.

U.N. monitors visited the town over the weekend, releasing video Sunday that depicts bodies being loaded into a truck and others being prepared for funerals. One man tells the monitors that shelling began after Friday prayers, and the killings didn’t stop until 2 a.m. Saturday.

Opposition activists said killings began with a mortar bombardment, followed by a rampage by government-allied militias. Video posted over the weekend showed opposition activists displaying the bloodied remains of more than 10 children, including some with limbs blown off or skulls torn open. In another, medics treated a crying infant whose chest was covered in bandages.

Syrian officials say government troops are fighting to protect their people from “terrorist gangs.” But Alex Thompson, a reporter for Britain’s ITV television network who was in Houla, said its residents appeared to be voting with their feet.

“There are lots of civilians in the rebel-held areas. They are not apparently frightened of the fighters. They are speaking openly to the United Nations,” Thomson told CNN. “In the areas of the town held by the army, there is nobody — it’s a ghost town.”

But Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi told reporters Sunday in Damascus, “We deny that the Syrian armed forces were responsible of what took place in Houla.” And on state-run media, the Syrian regime said “al Qaeda-linked terrorist groups committed two horrible massacres against a number of families in the towns of al-Shumariyeh and Taldo in the countryside of Homs province.”

The state report also showed gruesome images of children spattered with blood.

CNN can not independently confirm details from Syria nor the authenticity of videos, however, as the Syrian government strictly limits access by foreign journalists.

The White House joined the condemnation Sunday afternoon, with National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor saying the United States was horrifed by “credible reports” of the massacre, “including stabbing and ax attacks on women and children.”

“These acts serve as a vile testament to an illegitimate regime that responds to peaceful political protest with unspeakable and inhuman brutality,” Vietor said in a written statement.

And British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he had summoned the Syrian charge d’affaires in London to his office “so that we can underline our absolute horror at what has happened.”

“It is a familiar tactic of the Assad regime to blame others for what is happening in their country, to try to get out of responsibility for the scale of death and destruction,” he said.

The crisis began in March 2011, when peaceful demonstrations modeled on the “Arab Spring” uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt sprang up across Syria. Al-Assad’s government responded by turning police and troops on demonstrators — but the protests spread across the country, with defecting soldiers taking up up arms on behalf of the opposition.

Opposition: 88 killed in ‘barbaric act’ in central Syria

cease-fire agreement, brokered by former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s office, has been in place since April 12 as part of a six-point peace plan. But Col. Qasim Saad Eddine, a spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army, said Saturday that it was “no longer possible to abide by the peace plan” after the Houla killings.

“This is a clear evidence that Kofi Annan’s plan is dead and a clear indication that Bashar Assad and his criminal gang do not understand anything but the language of force and violence,” Eddine said. He urged the U.N. Security Council to authorize airstrikes by member nations against government forces and strategic points.
A U.N. report issued Friday said Syrian forces are still using heavy weapons in many areas despite the April cease-fire, and “The overall level of violence in the country remains quite high” despite the presence of U.N. monitors. Monitors have heard the sound of shelling in cities and towns and seen the aftereffects, their report states, while Syrian authorities say they were coming under fire from rebel troops.

Meanwhile, opposition groups effectively control “significant parts of some cities” the monitors state. But the government’s stepped-up security crackdown “has led to massive violations of human rights” by Syrian troops and pro-government militias, the report states.

Makdissi, in his remarks Sunday, accused some U.N. countries of “openly working against Syria” and rejected the notion of an armed opposition in the country.

“There is no armed opposition in Syria. There is either an intellectual opposition, and we welcome their participation in national dialogue, or there are armed terrorist gangs that refuse the political resolution,” Makdissi said.

Sunday’s closed Security Council session comes a day ahead of a scheduled meeting between Syrian officials and Annan, the joint U.N.-Arab League special envoy on the crisis. And Hague was on his way to Moscow for talks with one of Syria’s leading allies. He said he will call on Russia to support rapid and unequivocal pressure on the Assad regime, as well as “accountability for crimes.”

“The important thing at the moment is to try to make the Annan plan work,” Hague said. But he added, “Time is running out for the Assad regime to adopt that plan, implement that plan and stop the torture, abuse and murder of their own people.”

Israel, meanwhile, has largely kept quiet amid the tumult of the Arab Spring in the surrounding region. But Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed his “revulsion” at the killings in Syria and its allies in Iran and the Lebanese Shiite Muslim militia Hezbollah.

“Iran and Hezbollah are an inseparable part of the Syrian atrocities and the world needs to act against them,” Netanyahu said in a written statement.

All three are Israel’s leading antagonists in the region. Israel has fought three wars against Syria since independence in 1948, fought innumerable skirmishes and a month-long 2006 conflict with Hezbollah and has repeatedly warned that it would not tolerate any Iranian effort to develop nuclear weapons.

The Arab League will meet Saturday in Doha to discuss Syria, according to a senior Arab League official. Foreign ministers are expected to attend, the official sending, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the media.

Since the Syrian regime and opposition members accepted the plan in March, at least 1,635 people have been killed, the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria said Saturday.

Turkey’s President on Egypt, Syria and Israel

Lt. Bassim al-Khaled, a spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Movement, said more bloodshed is coming. The al-Assad government is using the cease-fire and peace plan “to kill more people and is trying to crush the uprising,” al-Khaled said.

“So the only language this regime is going to understand is the language of the gun,” al-Khaled said. “Wait and see, we will make them pay for each drop of blood which was shed.”

U.N. officials say more than 9,000 people, mostly civilians, have died and tens of thousands have been uprooted since the uprising began in March 2011. Opposition groups report a death toll of more than 11,000 people.

(edition.cnn.com / 27.05.2012)

UN condemns Syria over Houla massacre

Security Council calls for government to cease use of heavy weapons in population centres.

The United Nations Security Council (UNSC), has unanimously condmened the use of heavy weapons in Houla massacre that left 108 killed, including 49 children.

“The Security Council condemned in the strongest possible terms the killings, confirmed by United Nations observers, of dozens of men, women and children and the wounding of hundreds more in the village of (Houla), near Homs, in attacks that involved a series of government artillery and tank shellings on a residential neighborhood,” the non-binding statement said on Sunday.

Citing the use of “a series of government artillery and tank shellings on a residential neighbourhood”, the UN body again demanded that the forces of Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, withdraw heavy weapons from Syrian towns.

The press statement considers the ”outrageous use of force against civilian populations” constitutes a violation of international law, in particular, United Nations Security Council Resolutions 2042 and 2043.

Al Jazeera’s Kristen Saloomey, reporting live from the United Nations in New York, said the intention behind the statement was to come out with a quick and unified response to Saturday’s events.

“What we have is a statement that was agreed to by all members of the Security Council [that was] watered down a bit” after Russia argued that because the attack took place in opposition territory, government forces may not have been involved.

Shortly after the reading of the statement, Bashar Ja’afari, Syrian ambassador the United Nations, said that his nation’s government had condemned Saturday’s massacre using “exactly the wording adopted a few minutes ago by the Security Council” itself.

Ja’afari then criticised what he called “the tsunami of lies that were said a few minutes ago by some members of the Council … leveling accusations against my government based on what they said is evidence”.

Calling the statements “pitiful and regrettable”, Ja’afari said that neither Major General Robert Mood, the chief of the UN observer mission deployed to Syria, nor anyone else, directly blamed the Syrian government for the massacre near the city of Homs.

(www.aljazeera.com / 27.05.2012)

Prisoners’ health deteriorates after 70 days on hunger strike

Mahmoud al-Sarsak has been on hunger strike for 70 days.
RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — A prisoner on hunger strike for 70 days is suffering deteriorating health, the PA Ministry of Detainee Affairs warned Sunday.

Mahmoud al-Sarsak, a 25-year-old soccer player in Palestine’s national team, has been on hunger strike since March 19 in protest at his detention without charge.

Al-Sarsak was detained in July 2009 while leaving the Gaza Strip to join his team in the West Bank He was interrogated for 30 days in Ashkelon prison.

After Israeli intelligence failed to find any charge against him, he was detained under the “unlawful combatant law,” the ministry said in a statement.

Al-Sarsak is the only prisoner in Israel detained under the “unlawful combatant law,” under which detainees are held without charge or trial.

It provides “even fewer legal protections than Palestinians held in administrative detention,” the prisoner rights group Addameer says.

The ministry says Israel offered to release al-Sarsak on July 12 but he is insisting the proposal is made in writing. An earlier offer to release al-Sarsak on July 1 was subsequently retracted by Israel, Addameer says,

According to the ministry, al-Sarsak rejected a proposal to release him into exile in Norway.

Al-Sarsak’s father on Friday appealed to the international sporting community to show solidarity with his son.

In a letter, al-Sarsak’s father said it was “unbearable” for his family to see Israel awarded the hosting of the UEFA under-21s soccer championship and preparing to join the London Olympics “while it routinely arrests, tortures, imprisons and kills Palestinians, including football players, without consequence.”

“This is not fair play. Sports should show solidarity,” he wrote.

(www.maannews.net / 27.05.2012)

Election committee to commence work in Gaza this week

GAZA CITY: Palestinian election officials will begin work on updating the electoral register in the Gaza Strip Monday in a key step to pave the way for elections, an official told AFP Sunday. On May 20, senior Fatah and Hamas officials agreed that the Palestinian electoral commission would start work in Gaza on May 27 and that consultations to form a new interim “government of independents” would start the same day.

But Jamil Khaldi, head of the Central Elections Commission in Gaza, said work would only begin Monday after the arrival of CEC president Hanna Nasser. “Nothing will happen today. The CEC delegation led by Hanna Nasser will arrive in Gaza Monday and we will all have a meeting with [Hamas] Prime Minister Ismail Haniya. Immediately afterwards, we will start our work,” he told AFP.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri confirmed that the CEC president would arrive Monday and hold talks with Haniya but said there were a few technical issues to be resolved before the commission could begin updating the voter lists. “We are committed to what we agreed on regarding the start of preparations for voter registrations,” he told AFP.

Talks between Hamas and Fatah officials over the interim government were also due to start in Cairo Sunday.

According to a posting late Saturday on the Facebook page of top Hamas official Moussa Abu Marzouq, talks between the two delegations would begin Sunday as planned.

“A meeting will be held tomorrow, Sunday May 27, between Fatah and Hamas delegations to start consultations over forming a new government,” he wrote.

But a senior Hamas official in Gaza told AFP the meeting would not take place for several days.

“The meeting between the Fatah and Hamas delegations will not happen today or tomorrow,” he told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Fatah refused to meet before the Central Elections Commission starts work, which won’t happen for a few days,” he said, indicating that although CEC officials were to meet Monday, its work to update the lists would not start for several days.

Under the terms of a reconciliation deal signed by Hamas and Fatah in Cairo on May 3, 2011, the two factions were to put together a caretaker Cabinet of independent technocrats tasked with preparing for presidential and legislative elections within a year of the signing of the accord.

But the rival factions never managed to agree on the makeup of the interim government, meaning preparations for holding elections have never got off the ground.

The last time the Palestinians held elections was in 2006, and since then, the electoral register in Gaza has not been updated, despite various attempts to do so.

Earlier this month, a new 25-member Cabinet took office in the Fatah-run West Bank which said one of its top priorities was preparing for local elections ahead of presidential and parliamentary polls.

The move was denounced by Hamas as a blow to reconciliation efforts, but it also appeared to breathe life into the stalled unity agreement, with both parties announcing plans to make a fresh bid to piece together the long-promised caretaker government.

Several weeks ago, Abbas also amended the electoral law, making it possible for elections to be held at different times in the West Bank and Gaza.

Previously, the law stated that elections must be held simultaneously in both territories.
(www.dailystar.com.lb / 27.05.2012)

Israeli settler shoots Palestinian in West Bank

Jewish youths hold Israeli flags during a rally march outside the West Bank settlement of Itamar, near Nablus.

NABLUS (Ma’an) — An Israeli settler shot and wounded a Palestinian man on Saturday in a clash that began when a group of settlers set fire to fields belonging to a Palestinian village in the occupied West Bank, officials said.

Najeh al-Safadi, 22, was handcuffed by a guard from the illegal settlement of Yitzhar who threw him to the ground and shot him while other settlers kicked him, a relative said.

Muntaser al-Safadi said people from his village, Orif, which is near Nablus in the northern West Bank, arrived and rescued the young man. He was transferred to Rafidia hospital with severe injuries.

Residents said about 25 settlers, some of them carrying guns, set fire to wheat fields and an olive grove near the Orif school. Settlers fired at people who were trying to put out the fire, they said.

Villagers came out to extinguish the fire and ended up clashing with the settlers, said Nablus official Ghassan Daghlas. Eight people were injured and four of them were hospitalized, he told Ma’an.

An Israeli military spokesman confirmed that a settler shot and wounded one Palestinian, adding that security forces were sent to the scene to break up the violence.

“The Israel Defense Forces regards this incident as severe and will thoroughly investigate it,” the spokesman said.

The military is investigating a similar incident from last week in which a video distributed by an anti-settlement group appeared to show a settler shooting and wounding a Palestinian during a confrontation with rock-throwing Palestinians, as soldiers stood by.

Daghlas said Saturday’s attack was a direct assault on civilians, and part of a pattern of incidents sparked by gun-toting settlers.

The official expressed surprise at the “international silence” toward Israeli violations, particularly the silence of the United Nations.

(maannews.net / 27.05.2012)

Tiny Palestinian Airlines back in the skies, its fortunes tied to statehood dreams

 A Palestinian Airlines flight takes off from Marka Airbase to El-Arish, Egypt, in Amman, Jordan, Sunday, May 27, 2012. Palestinian Airlines is back in the skies after being grounded for seven years by the vagaries of the Mideast conflict. It’s a mom-and-pop operation, with just two 48-seat turbo-prop planes, two weekly flights and a borrowed hub in Egypt, but Palestinians say just being on the map again is what matters.

MARKA AIRBASE, Jordan — Palestinian Airlines is back in the skies after being grounded for seven years by the deepening enmities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Once hailed as a symbol of Palestinian statehood dreams, the carrier is a tiny operation, with just two 48-seat turboprop planes, two weekly flights and a borrowed hub in Egypt.

But Palestinians say just being on the map again is what matters.

“My hands were shaking when I bought the ticket … and it said the name of the carrier is Palestinian Airlines,” said recent passenger Zuhair Mohammed, a 38-year-old teacher from Gaza.

The 15-year-old airline’s fortunes have been closely tied to the quest for a Palestinian state.

In the late 1990s, when Palestinians appeared on the verge of a statehood deal with Israel, Palestinian Airlines operated from Gaza International Airport, flew tens of thousands of passengers a year to Middle Eastern destinations and planned to expand to Europe.

Those ambitions were crushed by the outbreak of a Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation in September 2000, following the collapse of U.S.-led peace talks. Over the next year, Israeli troops destroyed the Gaza airport, and Palestinian Airlines was forced to move its base to El-Arish, an Egyptian coastal resort about 60 kilometers from Gaza.

Seven years ago, the airline stopped flying altogether after its reservoir of passengers dried up. It had mainly served Gazans who, starting in 2005, could no longer reach El-Arish because of increasingly frequent Israeli closures of Gaza’s borders.

The closures accompanied an Israeli troop withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 and intensified with the capture of an Israeli soldier by Gaza militants a year later and the violent takeover of Gaza by the Islamic militant Hamas in 2007.

Until last year, the vast majority of Gaza’s 1.7 million residents were locked inside the territory, in part because Egypt went along with Israel and largely kept its Rafah border terminal with Gaza closed.

After the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in 2011, Rafah gradually reopened and Gazans are now able to travel, though restrictions remain, particularly for men under 40, who need Egyptian security clearance.

Palestinian Airlines once again had potential customers. On May 9 it resumed operations, starting with biweekly flights between El-Arish and Marka Airbase in the Jordanian capital of Amman. The new route means Gazans no longer have to travel to Cairo, some 350 kilometers (215 miles) from their territory, to board planes.

Mustafa Abu Dan, a Palestinian civil servant, on Sunday bought four tickets at a Gaza City travel agency for a flight to Amman. He said he’s pleased to be saving time and money, but he worried that Gazans and their travel plans will always vulnerable to political upheaval.

“Rafah is the only gate for us to the world now, but still it’s linked to the political developments in Egypt,” said Abu Dan, 32. “I voice my hope to have our own airport again so we can travel without problems, like others.”

(www.washingtonpost.com / 27.05.2012)

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